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Uh-oh, was it Oya we
invoked on election day?
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Oya is the powerful Yoruba
Goddess of the Winds of Change; the Primeval Mother
of Chaos; Queen of the Nine (for the nine
tributaries of the Niger River). Using her machete,
or sword of truth, she cuts through stagnation and
clears the way for new growth. She does what needs
to be done. She is the wild woman, the force of
change; lightning, fire, tornadoes, earthquakes and
storms of all kinds are ruled by Oya. She is also
Queen of the Marketplace, a shrewd businesswoman
and adept with horses. As the wind, she is the
first breath and the last, the one who carries the
spirits of the dead to the other world, which is
why she is associated with cemeteries. The
sculpture on the right is after the Oya Shrine:
Female Equestrian by Bamgboye, Odo-Owa, Ekiti
region, mid 20th century. The heads on her necklace
are from the same piece.
by Sandra Stanton (Visit
her website at www.goddessmyths.com)
Oya-Yansa is the Queen of the Winds of change. She
is feared by many people because She brings about
sudden structural change in people and things. Oya
does not just rearrange the furniture int he house
-- She knocks the building to the ground and blows
away the floor tiles.
She is the cyclone and the
earthquake. Oya fans Her skirts and blows the
branches from the trees; should She choose to cry,
torrential rains fall on the earth.
She is the Mother of Mind.
She can impart genius, restore memory, or slap you
with insanity.
Oya opens Her mouth, flicks
out Her tongue, and lightning strikes. She has nine
heads; She is the River Niger.
No one can be certain of
Oya's movement; no one can capture Her smile. She
is the mistress of disguises. yesterday Oya was a
gentle lamb; today, a buffalo trampling the earth
beneath Her feet. Tomorrow She'll be a rainbow --
maybe.
from Jambalaya, by
Luisah Teish (Order from Powells!)
To seek adequate words with
which to trace her elemental patterns is an act of
homage to the goddess of tropical weathers in hopes
that her compassion may reciprocally illuminate
inner equivalents with which we have struggled in
private darkness. It has been a struggle
intensified by patriarchal discountenance of
powerful emotion -- its problematic relegated to
women "in need of help," as the saying goes. In
being choaked by compliant mothers to stifle rather
than outride our storms, to dam and conceal our
floods, to bank our fires and give tinder over to
future husbands, the Oya in ourselves froze in its
tracks. Yet such ice particles, negatively charged
at the heart of mounting storm are the mysterious,
generative sources of Oya's lightning. Thus, in
other way obstructed, Oya strikes us -- quirking
here, cramping there. Soon with our brains, the
indefatigable goddess goes jaggedly to work upon
our bodies, cutting off circulation, opening
sluices, instilling victims who could be votaries
with a variety of "female complains," catching them
up in mindless swirls of activity, throwing them
down into incapacitating vortices, playing havoc
with appetite. Stop, Oya, we beg you! We will sound
your praises along all rivers from Hudson to Niger.
We will hang prayer flags to flutter like laundry
stretching from fire escape to fire, continent to
continent. We will strive to know your winds the
better to reclaim our part of fire.
from Oya, In Praise of
the Goddess, by Judith Gleason, 1987
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