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<title>DYNAMICS OF NTA FESTIVAL PERFORMANCE AMONG IRETE PEOPLE OF SOUTHEAST NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2345</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-09T07:10:49Z</dc:date>
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<title>DYNAMICS OF NTA FESTIVAL PERFORMANCE AMONG IRETE PEOPLE OF SOUTHEAST NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2346</link>
<description>DYNAMICS OF NTA FESTIVAL PERFORMANCE AMONG IRETE PEOPLE OF SOUTHEAST NIGERIA
ONUOHA, Louisa Nnenna
African festivals are often reconstructed in order not to lose them completely. Nta&#13;
hunting festival has undergone such reconstruction. Although existing studies have&#13;
mainly focused on the religious and cultural values of the performance, the contemporary&#13;
and cultural reconstruction have not been thoroughly explored. This study, therefore,&#13;
examined the reconstruction of Nta festival and its impact on both the festival and the&#13;
people of Irete in Nigeria.&#13;
Richard Schechner’s Theory of Performance was adopted as the framework. The study&#13;
utilised the qualitative method involving ethnographic and descriptive designs. Primary&#13;
data were collected through participant observation and 23 Key Informant Interviews&#13;
conducted with purposively selected participants, including the autonomous king of Irete&#13;
(Eze), 10 traditional title holders, the Onye Ishi Ala (Chief Priest of Irete) and 11&#13;
members of the Eze cabinet. Twenty In-depth Interviews were conducted with eight&#13;
council members drawn from Ndi Eze, Ndi Oki, Irete Hunters Union and Ndi Oha; seven&#13;
notable stakeholders in the cultural reformation of Nta festival; and five government&#13;
officials. Four Focus Group Discussions were conducted, one each with the Umunweju&#13;
Family meeting (Lagos Branch), the youth wing of Irete Community Development&#13;
Union, Irete Hunters Union and Irete Christian Fathers Association. Data were content&#13;
analysed using descriptive and narrative styles.&#13;
Christianity, Western education and modernity aided the decline in participation in Nta&#13;
festival as it is regarded as unchristian. The festival has therefore been reconstructed to&#13;
improve participation, leading to two forms of performance: the traditional Nta festival&#13;
celebrated by adherents of Igbo traditional religion and the reconstructed Nta festival&#13;
celebrated by the Eze Agubiam and his cabinet members. This also accommodates other&#13;
Irete people who are Christians and would not like to participate in the traditional&#13;
festival. The traditional Nta festival remains as handed down by the Irete forbears and is&#13;
being practised by the Onye Ishi Ala, members of the Oha cult (Ala priests) and&#13;
interested Irete indigenes. This form starts with the Onye Ishi Ala’s visit to Nkolo forest&#13;
where he offers sacrifices to the ancestors on behalf of the community. In the&#13;
reconstructed Nta festival, the Eze, members of his cabinet and other stakeholders add a&#13;
“Christian touch” to the celebration of Nta. The performance takes place at the Eze’s&#13;
palace and begins with the blessings of the Reverend Father. All sacrifices to the gods are&#13;
cancelled and replaced with prayers to the Christian God, making the festival of lesser&#13;
traditional sacrality. The reduction in traditional sacrality highlights the tension between&#13;
indigeneity and modernity as occasioned by religion and culture. Due to the&#13;
reconstruction of the performance, more people now participate in Nta festival.&#13;
The reconstructed Nta festival produces a unique Igbo hybrid festival that represents a&#13;
new model of religious and cultural expression in contemporary Igbo Irete, thereby&#13;
protecting the festival from extinction and improving Irete community relations.
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<dc:date>2022-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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