the Ẹdo linguist

the Ẹdo linguist

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An Ẹdo language linguist and teacher.

01/01/2026

Isẹlogbe ivbi Ẹdo hia fẹrẹ uwa hia ọb'ukpo ọgbọn.

As we celebrate this new year let's be reminded that the Ẹdo new year is the iguẹ festival and it is not a fe**sh practice. It is the very essence of Being an Ẹdo man.
Come December 2026 prepare to celebrate the new year the Ẹdo style.

24/12/2025

The ihogbe family presenting the Ẹwerẹ leaves to our great monarch.
Fun fact. The Ẹdo linguist is a member of the ihogbe family 😁
Ọba gha tọọ ọ kpẹre isẹẹ

ISẸLOGBE ẸVBO
Ọmọruyi Patience Izzy Akokoedo TV Greatest EDO EZỌMỌ Kakadu

18/12/2025

Iguẹ experience 2025 is 22nd (Monday) and it promises great lessons and intriguing experience.

10/12/2025
10/12/2025

Our culture is not disappearing, it is calling us home.
The Iguẹ Festival is a celebration of life, gratitude, and unity.
rituals. No fear. Just tradition at its purest.
Be part of the story.
Be part of Iguẹ Ọmọruyi Patience Izzy Akokoedo TV

10/12/2025

Our culture is not disappearing it is calling us home.
The Iguẹ Festival is a celebration of life, gratitude, and unity.
No rituals. No fear. Just tradition at its purest.
Be part of the story.
Be part of Iguẹ.

10/12/2025

Have you registered?

The Iguẹ Festival is one of the most misunderstood Ẹdo traditional festivals, and many people wrongly call it fe**sh simply because they do not understand what actually happens during the celebration. In reality, the Iguẹ Festival is not a spiritual or religious practice of any kind; it is purely traditional. To understand this, we must first recognize that tradition and religion are not the same thing. Religion involves worship, doctrines, and ceremonies directed toward a deity, while tradition consists of the cultural practices, customs, and values passed down from our ancestors that help preserve identity and heritage. The Iguẹ Festival belongs completely to the realm of tradition, not religion.

What we do in the Iguẹ Festival is simple and meaningful. It is a festival of thanksgiving. On this day, the Ẹdo people thank God Almighty, the Creator of all things, for life, protection, and blessings. We also thank our ancestors, not as gods, but as the people who came before us, who laid the path we walk today and whose wisdom, sacrifices, and existence make our own lives possible. Another important part of the thanksgiving is showing gratitude to one’s head. The Ẹdo people believe that when the head is good, the body is good. Just as the body cannot function without the head, a good head brings guidance, clarity, and protection. So giving thanks to your head is simply acknowledging that your life is moving in a positive direction.

The festival also involves cleansing, which the Ẹdo people call Lubirrie. This cleansing is not spiritual worship or sacrifice; it is symbolic. Just as churches perform deliverance, or homes perform new-year cleansing, the Iguẹ cleansing is a cultural act meant to remove negativity, refresh the body and land, and prepare the community for a new season of peace and progress. No sacrifices are performed to any deity and no fe**sh rituals take place. It is simply a cultural renewal.

Another important aspect of the Iguẹ Festival is the promotion of peace and tranquility, called ẹwerẹ. During this period, the community focuses on unity, settling misunderstandings, restoring harmony, and praying for peace. The entire festival is built around gratitude, cleansing, renewal, and unity nothing fe**sh.

Even the prayers attached to the coconut and kolanut, which people often misunderstand, are simple symbolic prayers. The kolanut represents life. The Ẹdo people say, “He who brings kolanut brings life,” because a kolanut tree isn't harmed by anyone our lives will not be cut short. The coconut is full of water, purity, and nourishment, and no one knows how the water enters it. So the prayer says that just as no one knows how water enters the coconut, so shall no enemy know the source of our blessings. This is the same kind of prayer people make in church, in the mosque, or in their homes. It is not worship; it is simply a heartfelt wish for protection and good fortune.

In truth, the Iguẹ Festival is not fe**sh in any way. It is a cultural practice passed down from our ancestors a festival of thanksgiving, cleansing, peace, and renewal. It is part of our identity as Edo people, a heritage that binds us together and reminds us of who we are.

ISẸLOGBE!!!!

04/12/2025

UGIE IGUE EXPERIENCE is set!!!

The date is out, the ball has been placed in motion. Be part of a cultural journey that brings Iguẹ to life.
Join our guided experience as we take ẸWERẸ from house to house, cleanse the environment, and explore the sacred moments that make Iguẹ unforgettable.
Reconnect with heritage. Understand the meaning. Feel the spirit of the season.
Be part of Isẹlogbe!!!
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29/11/2025
29/11/2025

This is a project I have in mind to do this December.

The inspiration behind it is every year, many of our Ẹdo people come home for the festive season but don’t really know how to connect with the culture or fully experience what makes Iguẹ so special.

This project is simply my way of helping people understand our traditions better and feel more connected to home. It’s a guided experience that explains the meaning of the Iguẹ festival in a simple, enjoyable, and memorable way.

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