
Religion and the Future of Nigeria: Lessons from the Yoruba Case
Author(s) -
J. D. Y. Peel
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
yoruba studies review /yoruba studies review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2578-692X
pISSN - 2473-4713
DOI - 10.32473/ysr.v1i1.130012
Subject(s) - yoruba , modernity , politics , harmony (color) , sociology , period (music) , aesthetics , social science , political science , history , art , law , philosophy , linguistics , visual arts
This paper presents an illuminating analysis of the place of religion in Yoruba social and political life, and why the Yoruba experience represents a great example to the rest of Nigeria, particularly the religiously-volatile north of the country. Combining multiple approaches from historical sociology, the sociology of religlon, political history and the public lives of critical political and religious agents over a period of about a century of Yoruba history, the article explains why the Yoruba case is an exemplar in religious harmony. He argues that the Yoruba are constantly pressed towards olaju (modernity/development/progress) which makes cross-cutting communal belonging more salient, thus ensuring that the Yoruba constantly mobilize both religious and secular institutions and processes in the all-embracing project of olaju.