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Ojude Oba: How a Palace Thank-You Became Africa’s Cultural Pageant

Regberegbe age grade groups in coordinated Aso Oke at the 2026 Ojude Oba festival in Ijebu Ode, held three days after Eid al-Adha. Photo: Elejo Shot It.












By Egungwu Chukwuka Benjamin

‎Every year, on the third day after Eid al-Adha, Ijebu Ode changes. The historic town known for its calm pace becomes loud with talking drums, bright Aso Oke, and the thunder of horses. This is Ojude Oba, literally translated as “the King’s Forecourt,” a festival that grew from a single family's act of gratitude into one of Africa's most dazzling cultural spectacles.

‎Historical records trace the roots of Ojude Oba to the late 19th century, during the reign of Awujale Ademuyewo Afidipote. When Islam began to flourish in Ijebuland, the monarch showed great wisdom by granting Muslim converts the freedom to practice their faith openly without persecution.

‎Among these early converts was Chief Balogun Kuku, a legendary warrior and prominent leader. Because of his new faith, Kuku could no longer take part in traditional festivals such as the Odeda festival, where worshippers of various traditional deities gathered to pay homage to the king. In the early 1880s, determined to show loyalty to the crown while honoring his new faith, Balogun Kuku led his family, friends, and Islamic followers to the palace courtyard. They came to pray for the Awujale’s long life and to thank him for the religious liberty they enjoyed, birthing what was initially called the Ita-Oba festival.

‎What began as a modest Muslim procession of gratitude quickly struck a chord with the wider community. Over the decades, neighbors, friends, and Christian converts joined the annual march to the palace. Today, Ojude Oba has outgrown its purely religious origins. It is now a grand arena where Muslims, Christians, and traditional worshippers stand side by side, bound by a shared Ijebu ancestry.

‎The flawless organization of the festival rests on the shoulders of the Regberegbe, the traditional age-grade societies that form the bedrock of Ijebu social structure. These groups consist of men and women born within the same three-to-five-year window, a system revived in the modern era by the Paramount Ruler, His Royal Majesty Oba Sikiru Kayode Adetona, to foster community development and solidarity.

‎The Regberegbe turn the festival into a masterclass in high fashion and friendly rivalry. For months leading up to the day, each age grade secretly brainstorms colors, patterns, and fabric textures with local weavers and designers. An unwritten rule governs the preparation: no group repeats the cloth or design of the previous year.

‎When they step into the grand arena of the Awujale Pavilion, the result is a breathtaking sea of hand-woven luxury. Heavy indigo dyes, rich sanyan silk, and brilliantly striped aso oke float across the floor. Within each Regberegbe, wealthy merchants and ordinary citizens dress identically, reinforcing an egalitarian bond where peer solidarity eclipses individual status.

‎If the age grades provide the elegance, the descendants of the Baloguns, the war chiefs, and the Elesins, the master horsemen, bring the thunder. The biggest moment at Ojude Oba is the horse parade. It is a bold, colourful show that reminds the town of how its warriors once protected the kingdom.

‎Riders from more than twenty noble families enter the arena on horses dressed in rich, detailed cloth. They fire old guns into the air. The smell of gunpowder spreads and you can feel the roar of celebration. The riders wear heavy velvet and clothes stitched by hand. They guide their horses with calm, skilled movements through the crowd. This is Ijebu’s military history kept alive. It isn’t locked in a museum. It lives on in the sons and daughters who carry the old titles.

A horse rider in elaborate regalia draws cheers from the crowd during the 2026 Ojude Oba Festival in Ijebu Ode. Photo: John Mokan


‎By evening, the dust settles at the pavilion and the arena clears, but the true impact of the day remains. Ojude Oba is more than a single afternoon of pageantry. It is a case study in cultural resilience, a blueprint showing how an ancient African kingdom can utilize modern media, corporate sponsorships, and global visibility while keeping its heritage untainted.

‎As the images of horsemen and vibrant textiles travel across smartphone screens worldwide, they tell a timeless story. Ojude Oba is proof that history is not just something the Ijebu people remember. It is something they wear, ride, and proudly carry into the future.

NB: Historical details in this article are drawn from published accounts of the Ojude Oba Festival, oral traditions of Ijebuland, academic studies, and publicly available cultural records.

Photos by Elejo Shot It and John Mokan are published with official approval and duly credited as agreed. Additional images sourced from the public X posts of the Governor and Hon. Adebutu are included with credit to the original accounts. For more captivating pictures from the 2026 Ojude Oba festival, view Journalism Flipbook for more.

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