Home

Oriki

Oriki is a traditional Yoruba form of praise poetry used to honor individuals, families, places, and deities. The term conveys praise and reverence, and oriki is typically delivered by specialized praise singers or poets in recitative or chant-like style, often in a social or ritual setting.

The content of oriki relies on genealogies, notable deeds, virtues, lineage, and connections to ancestors, kings,

Oriki is performed during a range of ceremonies, including births, naming ceremonies, introductions, festivals, weddings, funerals,

While oral by tradition, oriki has also been recorded, published in anthologies, and adapted into modern poetry

and
Orishas.
It
employs
metaphor,
allusion,
and
vivid
imagery
to
frame
the
subject
within
a
wider
ethical
and
historical
context.
Oriki
can
assert
status,
moral
qualities,
and
capabilities,
and
it
often
links
the
person
or
group
to
revered
ancestors
or
divine
powers.
The
performance
may
include
refrains,
epithets,
and
ritual
invocations,
serving
both
as
entertainment
and
as
a
mnemonic
device
for
communal
memory.
and
other
public
events.
It
functions
as
a
means
of
identity
formation,
social
validation,
and
cultural
continuity,
reinforcing
networks
of
kinship
and
community.
Acoustic
elements
commonly
accompany
the
recitation,
such
as
drums
(including
talking
drums),
clapping,
and
other
percussion,
with
the
voice
delivering
the
primary
charge
of
praise.
and
music.
It
is
most
closely
associated
with
Yoruba-speaking
regions
of
southwestern
Nigeria
but
has
variants
across
neighboring
West
African
communities
and
the
Yoruba-speaking
diaspora.
Oriki
remains
a
living
practice
that
contributes
to
personal
dignity,
communal
memory,
and
cultural
expression.