Ìfẹ́: Loving the Yoruba Way

Love in Yoruba culture is playful on one hand and serious on the other. Love consists of afẹ́rí and ojúṣe. Afẹ́rí, the closest form to romance, includes use of praise names, endearment, and ìtage or oge. Lovers often engage in playful banter called “oge” whereas they tease and cajole one another. oge can be used to coax an angry partner out of a bad mood or bribe one into making concessions. It might go thus:
“O dẹ̀ wa n’bínú. Áh, ah! Kí ló dẹ̀ lé to yẹn?” goes the husband nudging his wife’s playfully.
“Fi mí ‘lẹ̀ jọ̀ ọ́. Má ba mi s’ọ̀rọ̀,” returns the Mrs shaking off her husband’s hand.
“Ṣe b’ọ́n se ma a n binu l’óko yín nì yẹn?” He cajoles touching his wife’s lips. But she’s less forceful than the first time. He snuggles closer and puts and arm around her. She doesn’t shake him off.
“Pẹ̀lẹ́, ma binu. Ol’ójú edé mi. Akankẹ̀.” He finishes off using both a term of endearment and her praise name.
Ojúṣe on the other hand is duty or representation. It comprises of the husband doing for the wife what husbands are supposed to do and vis versa. For example, a husband is supposed to buy the coffin when his wife’s father dies. Similarly, a wife is expected to care for her husband’s people so he looks good. In combination, Yoruba love grounds the couple in a nucleus of their own and within the broader context of an extended family.

Abi Adegboye
Abi Adegboye
Author, Speaker, and Coach.

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