This refers to a traditional ritual practiced in Elele, Some Ikwerre groups and the Igbo people at large to ensure a bountiful yam harvest.
Elele, a town in Rivers State, Nigeria, known for it’s rich agricultural land. Talbot captured the event holding in Chief Elechi place, A local leader and custodian of traditional practices in the community.
Yams were a staple crop in Igbo culture, symbolizing fertility and prosperity. The ritual significance of wrestling match as fertility ritual is believed to stimulate the growth of yams. Where’s the Wrestlers represented the struggle between good and evil, fertility and barrenness.
The ritual focuses on honouring ancestral spirits, seeking their blessings for a successful harvest.
The wrestlers preparare by purifying themselves through rituals and sacrifices were they are selected men engaged in a symbolic wrestling match, often with ritualistic movements, invocation, prayers and incantations to the ancestors and deities to ensure a fruitful harvest were sacrifices and offerings are made to the gods, including food, animals, or other items.
The importance and significance of this agricultural ritual is ensured a bountiful yam harvest, guaranteeing food security, binding and connection between the ancestors and the living.
Percy Amaury Talbot’s noted that this practice can be seen in various parts of Igbo land such Oratta, Eziama (Mbaise), Etche, Egbema, Ndoki, (Ogba), Ekpeye as far his survey could cover and demonstrates the significance of yam cultivation in Igbo culture.
Reference:
Some Nigerian Fertility Cults – Percy Amaury Talbot – 1912.
Talbot, P. A. (1932). Tribes of the Niger Delta. London: Sheldon Press.