a beautiful page dedicated to Oya with many links ~
community-2.webtv.net/TheObsi...ask/Oya/
NAME: Oya, Oya-Ajere, Ayaba Nikua, Queen of Death, Lady of the Wind, Goddess of the Nine Skirts, Lady of War, Carrier of the Container of Fire. Bearded Amazon, Thunder Maiden, Iya Yansan "Mother of Nine," Ayi Lo Da "She Who Turns & Changes," Oia, Yansa, Yansan, Olla, Aido-Wedo,
AREA OF CONTROL: Change, Chaos, Transformation, Wind & Storm (though she must get her mother Yemaya's permission before she can create a hurricane,) the Marketplace, Women's power. the Gates of Death. She brings the first breath of new borns and takes the last breath of the dieing to the Gates of Death, the Graveyard, the dead can not be raised without her. The Harmattan Wind & Haze, a dry and dusty wind blowing northeast and west off the Sahara into the Gulf of Guinea between November and March (winter,) that like the Santa Ana wind in California is blamed for frayed nerves, and other unpleasantness.
SYMBOLS: The Niger river and it's 9 tributaries, the number 9, Machete or Sword, Multi-colored skirt which she fans and brings the winds, Crown of Copper with nine with 9 charms, a hoe, a pick, a gourd, a lightning bolt, a scythe, a shovel, a rake, an ax, and a mattock. A spear or a metal rendition of a lightning bolt (which is central to the altar of Oya,) Wind, Storms, Hurricanes, Tornadoes, Thunderbolts, Water Buffalo, Buffalo Horns, Flywhisk. Weather Vanes, Kites, Balloons, Pinwheels (9 or placed around her alter,) the Amazon River in Brazil.
COLORS: Red, Purple, Burnt Orange, Brown, Burgundy, Copper, Maroon, Aubergine (dark purple,) Plum.
USUAL IMAGE: Striking black women, sometimes shown bare from the waste up cupping her breasts, sometime show with a beard.
HOLY DAYS: November 25th, Feast of Oya.
RELATIVES: Yemaya the Great Sea Mother (mother,) Shango Storm God ( either husband and/or brother.) Egungun (son, along with 3 sets of twins who are her other children.)
OFFERINGS: Eggplants, Coins, Chocolate Pudding, Fine Cloth in her 9 colors, Red Wind, Star Fruit, Dark grapes, Black Chickens, Rice, Black Beans (cooked in a doublt boiler.) Rain Water.
All her food should be liberally laced with cocoa butter.
TABOOS: Palm kernel oil, Offerings of Ram (which make her particularly angry.) or Pork. Some say Oya does not eat any four legged animals, but others say that she likes an offering of female goat.
SYNODEITIES: lwa Maman Brijit (Vodoun) / Bride (Celtic) / Eris (Greek) / Kali (Hinduism.)
DETAILS: Oya is the Yoruba Goddess of many different things, the wind, from gentle breezes, to fierce gales, to deadly tornadoes, to the Harmattan wind that blows hot and steady like the Santa Ana, fraying nerves as it raises the Harmattan haze, she is also the Goddess of the graveyard, the Niger river, and the marketplace.
But those are just the effects of her main, her actual attribute. Oya, to use Occam's razor, is change, sudden and relentless.
Not the slow predictable change from summer to fall, or twilight to dawn, but the change of a wind that comes out of no where up roots trees that have stood for decades, and blows a house to rubble.
Oya is also the Goddess that bring the first, and takes the last breath of those being born and those dyeing, in-between those two pole of life she brings other vast changes.
Oya is a good goddess to have as a friend, and an awful one to piss off.
A boundary breaker, she was known to go hunting, a thing that was forbidden for women to do in the West African lands were she was first worshipped, she is also first into battle, charging into battle before her husband Shango,
Oya is the goddess of female power, the ultimate amazon, and the goddess of personal transformation, both mental and physical.
Oya is around at the birth of her people, and their death, and after that even at their return, which can't happen without her permission.
Oya is old, around in prehistory, and around still today.
Oya may control the breeze, but she's not to be taken lightly!
community-2.webtv.net/TheObsi...ask/Oya/
NAME: Oya, Oya-Ajere, Ayaba Nikua, Queen of Death, Lady of the Wind, Goddess of the Nine Skirts, Lady of War, Carrier of the Container of Fire. Bearded Amazon, Thunder Maiden, Iya Yansan "Mother of Nine," Ayi Lo Da "She Who Turns & Changes," Oia, Yansa, Yansan, Olla, Aido-Wedo,
AREA OF CONTROL: Change, Chaos, Transformation, Wind & Storm (though she must get her mother Yemaya's permission before she can create a hurricane,) the Marketplace, Women's power. the Gates of Death. She brings the first breath of new borns and takes the last breath of the dieing to the Gates of Death, the Graveyard, the dead can not be raised without her. The Harmattan Wind & Haze, a dry and dusty wind blowing northeast and west off the Sahara into the Gulf of Guinea between November and March (winter,) that like the Santa Ana wind in California is blamed for frayed nerves, and other unpleasantness.
SYMBOLS: The Niger river and it's 9 tributaries, the number 9, Machete or Sword, Multi-colored skirt which she fans and brings the winds, Crown of Copper with nine with 9 charms, a hoe, a pick, a gourd, a lightning bolt, a scythe, a shovel, a rake, an ax, and a mattock. A spear or a metal rendition of a lightning bolt (which is central to the altar of Oya,) Wind, Storms, Hurricanes, Tornadoes, Thunderbolts, Water Buffalo, Buffalo Horns, Flywhisk. Weather Vanes, Kites, Balloons, Pinwheels (9 or placed around her alter,) the Amazon River in Brazil.
COLORS: Red, Purple, Burnt Orange, Brown, Burgundy, Copper, Maroon, Aubergine (dark purple,) Plum.
USUAL IMAGE: Striking black women, sometimes shown bare from the waste up cupping her breasts, sometime show with a beard.
HOLY DAYS: November 25th, Feast of Oya.
RELATIVES: Yemaya the Great Sea Mother (mother,) Shango Storm God ( either husband and/or brother.) Egungun (son, along with 3 sets of twins who are her other children.)
OFFERINGS: Eggplants, Coins, Chocolate Pudding, Fine Cloth in her 9 colors, Red Wind, Star Fruit, Dark grapes, Black Chickens, Rice, Black Beans (cooked in a doublt boiler.) Rain Water.
All her food should be liberally laced with cocoa butter.
TABOOS: Palm kernel oil, Offerings of Ram (which make her particularly angry.) or Pork. Some say Oya does not eat any four legged animals, but others say that she likes an offering of female goat.
SYNODEITIES: lwa Maman Brijit (Vodoun) / Bride (Celtic) / Eris (Greek) / Kali (Hinduism.)
DETAILS: Oya is the Yoruba Goddess of many different things, the wind, from gentle breezes, to fierce gales, to deadly tornadoes, to the Harmattan wind that blows hot and steady like the Santa Ana, fraying nerves as it raises the Harmattan haze, she is also the Goddess of the graveyard, the Niger river, and the marketplace.
But those are just the effects of her main, her actual attribute. Oya, to use Occam's razor, is change, sudden and relentless.
Not the slow predictable change from summer to fall, or twilight to dawn, but the change of a wind that comes out of no where up roots trees that have stood for decades, and blows a house to rubble.
Oya is also the Goddess that bring the first, and takes the last breath of those being born and those dyeing, in-between those two pole of life she brings other vast changes.
Oya is a good goddess to have as a friend, and an awful one to piss off.
A boundary breaker, she was known to go hunting, a thing that was forbidden for women to do in the West African lands were she was first worshipped, she is also first into battle, charging into battle before her husband Shango,
Oya is the goddess of female power, the ultimate amazon, and the goddess of personal transformation, both mental and physical.
Oya is around at the birth of her people, and their death, and after that even at their return, which can't happen without her permission.
Oya is old, around in prehistory, and around still today.
Oya may control the breeze, but she's not to be taken lightly!
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Re: Oya
Thu, March 6, 2008 - 7:45 PMSuch amazing synchronicity Adya!!
Last friday I evoked her. Because some christian elitst bragging about get this "Saving the LOST in Africa" . I know most of them believe they are doing good, but just leave people alone already. An innocent and well functioning indigenous tribe does not need the modern world.
I called on her to come to the face of the "saviors" and sing her wind song . To raise up the dust and ash of the earth so the ancestors could sing with her. To call forward the daughters, mothers, and grandmothers to fight to preserve their noble heritage from invaders.
This after virtually screaming that these people are not lost that they have their own heritage, own gods, own religion, and that it was christianity that was lost on its elitist tyrannical blood thirst for religious dominance.
It just tears me up to see languages, cultures, religions, gods, and powerful wisdom lost to nothingness because they were visited by christianity. I am striving, virtually struggling, as to not get lost on the anger side of it.
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Re: Oya
Fri, March 7, 2008 - 6:31 AMI feel the same way, Bren. This week, there was a man talking to me about how he was going to Africa to work with them to do alternative fuels. I was, of course, interested. But then, later, he went into this speil about how his family used to be in the oil business and they got robbed and he was a Christian and he wasn't prejudiced, but he thought he could take his Christianity to Africa and make money from it, too.
Erk.
The next time he same into the office, I just turned away from him.
I think ANGER is like one of Oya's storms....blasting through the bullshit and blowing away the dust! :-D Ha ha!
It's only HOLDING ON TO ANGER ("chronic anger") that is hurtful (mostly to the one who holds on to it.)
BTW, if anybody wants to work with Anger and understand it better...I highly recommend a book called "Putting your Anger to work for you!" by Ruth & Joel Schroeder.
Sometimes, anger is needed to move the energy forward!
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Re: Oya
Wed, March 19, 2008 - 8:33 AMHekua Hei Yansa! (A greeting one might say in the Prescence of Oya)
Africa has been culturally and spiritually raped a thousands times over since Goddess knows when. It does make me full of righteous fury when i hear of the arrogance that people have in their dealings with Africa, But Mother Africa is springing in the hearts of Her children across the globe and calling them to take up Her anceint mysteries.
I use to fear that Her mysteries would go lost through time, but i am realizing something about these Mother Goddess traditions that we pratice. That they (even if they have slightly or drasticly changed) they connect to that deeper power, that form of God that is older then old and thus will never be lost (really), because especially in old cultures like the ones in Nigeria for example, u may go to ur Christian priest and ask him to do something, and if it don't work; u gonna take ur behind to the Priest or the Priestess of the Old God because you feel and have seen that they can work a power greater then any other.
I can really only speak for Nigeria because my father is directly from there, but it is not just Christianity that has taken root it is also Islam and it too was a big part of colonializing Africa just as much as Christianity, but like i said before many of the native peoples know of teh anceint powers that reside in Mother Africa and often petition Them in order to solve their spirtual needs (whether they talk about it or not) and the religion itself is thriving the more and more that children from other lands hear the call of MOther Africa and the Ancestors. Many people make pilgramage their or even become initaited into the Way of the Orisha there.
As far as the Arrogant. Oya will see to them, because She is the Mother of Ancestors. She is the Great Seer, the Guardian of the Cemetery and reincarnation, the Mother of Justice and She is a warrior like a great wild buffalo that tramples on the hubris of those who would try to silence Her song. And she is benevolent, righteous and fair and like the post said nothing to be trifled with. So they can march into Africa waving their religions in banners of false peace and attempt to cut down the heritage of teh land and they will find in the long run that their voices will fail them, and their beguiling tongue dripping with thirst will not move,their vanity will be shattered, and their children will hear the calling of a power Deeper then Deep, for MAMa OYa is the Great Tornado who rips apart hyprocity and blows in foundtaions of what is old and good. They will see, for in the Face of Oya, Great Mother of Change, champion of truth, nothing can stand. Oya is the Great Masqurader and sees through all mask especially ones of deceptions and ones of false truth.... In 2007 in meditation a voice ripped within my thoughts and I saw a land torn aparyt by a great wind, homes had fallen down, people wandered around destitue, but their was a sun so beautiful shinning on all of what one would think was destruction and A voice said, "I will be like the Great Storm..... Tell the people Change or be Changed...." and i know Oya had spoken something to me that I could not ignore....
On another note... Speaking of Oya here is me and the dance company i am apart of praticing Oya in October....
www.youtube.com/watch
I love this tribe very much. Sorry i have been away for a bit. Life makes a girl real busy sometimes, but i am happy i am back and loving the threads i am reading. Many blessings to all. peace and love.xoxoxoox.
Love is Eternity,
Dane
p.s Oya is one of those Goddesses with the title of the Bearded Lady.
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Re: Oya
Fri, April 4, 2008 - 6:56 AM(It is said Helen of Troy was a bearded lady!)
Wow, Dane....I just got to watch this dance.....I got goosebumps! It is so beautiful! I love how it feels kind of "trance-y" and then it steps up the rhythm. Do you count for this, or is there a leader who "ups" the rhythm....or is it an intuitive thing? Is it the drummer who changes the rhythm?
I love those fly whisks, too...they really give the "wind" feeling to the dance, as well as the swirling of the skirts! (almost like a Flamenco swirling....which maybe some Flamenco moves did come from Africa....)!
BTW, Caroline Casey identifies Oya with the planet of change, Uranus! "Let the winds of change blow through my life, bringing the most radically enlivening thing that could possibly happen. I am hoisting my sails. Parasail me into the place where I can connect with my allies, and together we can do the most good." (Casey) She opens her radio show (every week) with a song to Oya!
www.coyotenetworknews.com/
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Re: Oya
Fri, April 4, 2008 - 2:26 PMDane wrote: A voice said, "I will be like the Great Storm..... Tell the people Change or be Changed...."
Now that is a powerful message, and something tells me it has already begun ;)
I am so ready! bring it Mama Oya,
Mother of Justice, Champion of Truth!
Ashe!
Her warrior spirit shines through you brilliantly, Dane.
or do you say, you wear Oya proudly on your head ?
the video is incredibly beautiful, thank you for sharing with us....
Love & Blessings -
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Re: Oya
Mon, April 7, 2008 - 4:34 PMDane, you have already made my joining this tribe a gift - Oya - I've never seen her dance before, though have had various workshops on orishas, dance, songs - somehow never Oya, and she is the most important to me. I like this one best of all the dances that I've seen for others. Especially the side lunges or whatever they're called. What is the music? is it live musicians somewhere in the studio or is it recorded?
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Re: Oya
Fri, April 4, 2008 - 5:18 AMI also love working with Oya. Know her very well too! ;) Love the fact she is a very close equivalant to Hekate. I work mostly with those Gods and Goddesses that of darkness, life, death, rebirth etc. -
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Oya: Call the Storm
Tue, April 8, 2008 - 11:26 AMThis is playing here in Portland right now:
www.oregonlive.com/artsande...index.ssf -
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Re: Oya: Call the Storm
Tue, April 8, 2008 - 12:29 PMWhen I first encountered Her energy in Jacksonville Florida (of all places)
She manifest Herself (in my experience, at least)
on Her birthday or special day
as a tornado that passed only a mile or so away from where I lived
There were so many manifestations there at that time,
Orishas would appear in dreams without being invoked
and sometimes you would see people in their colors on the streets
looking so archetypal that you would wonder
is this a devotee or is this a vision?
I saw a beautiful, strong-featured, fierce looking woman
of african lineage dressed all in purple one Wednesday
and was never quite sure if she was physical or not
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