Sunday, 23 November 2025

Aje: The Yoruba Spirit of Wealth, Prosperity, and Divine Balance

Yemi Olakitan

                            


Among the revered deities in Yoruba spirituality, Aje occupies a cherished place as the Orisha of wealth, markets, prosperity, and abundance. In a culture where commerce, craftsmanship, and communal exchange are central to daily life, Aje represents both the material and spiritual forces that allow individuals and societies to thrive.

Aje is often described as a powerful feminine energy, though her presence transcends gender. She embodies the principles that make prosperity possible, diligence, fairness, creativity, and the mystical forces that open pathways to success. Traders, artisans, farmers, entrepreneurs, and even rulers seek her blessings, believing that wealth reaches its highest purpose only when aligned with responsibility and harmony.

Traditionally, Aje is honoured at marketplaces, sacred groves, and family shrines. Early in the morning, especially on market days, devotees offer prayers, water, kola nut, honey, cowries, and other symbolic gifts. These rituals are not mere transactions but acts of gratitude and alignment, acknowledging the unseen hands that guide fortune.

 


In Yoruba thought, Aje is not just about money. She represents ase, the spiritual power that draws opportunities, strengthens intuition, and nurtures ventures. Her presence teaches that wealth must circulate, just as markets depend on movement and exchange. A hoarded fortune stagnates, but shared prosperity multiplies. This philosophy shapes community life, where generosity is celebrated and success is a collective pride.

Folktales portray Aje as both compassionate and exacting. She rewards honesty and hard work but withdraws her favour when greed or injustice takes root. In this way, she becomes a moral compass, reminding people that true wealth emerges from balance ,between giving and receiving, ambition and humility, personal gain and communal wellbeing.

Today, Aje remains deeply relevant. Entrepreneurs invoke her guidance when launching new ventures. Families pray for abundance and stability. Artists and creatives seek inspiration from her flowing energy. Across the diaspora, she is honoured in various forms, symbolising resilience, enterprise, and the eternal connection between the spiritual and material worlds.


To embrace Aje is to recognise prosperity as a sacred force, one that demands respect, intention, and a heart open to both effort and blessing. She reminds her followers that wealth is not a destination but a living current, sustained by wisdom, integrity, and the invisible grace that shapes every journey.

Thursday, 20 November 2025

Why Nigeria Needs Community-Based Anti-Terror Squads Now!


 


Tinubu

Yemi Olakitan

 

For too long, the narrative of terrorism in Nigeria has been one of distant threats,     centralized responses, and communities left vulnerable in the agonizing gap between a distress call and military arrival. Our gallant armed forces are stretched thin, fighting a hydra-headed enemy across vast terrains. It is time for a paradigm shift. It is time to weave a security fabric so tight that terrorists have no room to operate. The solution lies in the creation of a federally and state-funded, military-trained.

 

Community-Based Anti-Terror Response Squad (CBARS).

The current model, while brave, is reactive. We need a proactive, pervasive system that places the power of security directly into the hands of the people, backed by the training and firepower of the state.

The Intelligence Chasm: Winning the War of Information

Terrorism do not emerge from vacuums; they live and plan within and among communities. They rely on the fear and silence of the populace. A centralized security apparatus often struggles to penetrate this wall of silence due to distance, distrust, and cultural barriers.

A CBARS unit, composed of vetted and trusted members of the community, shatters this dynamic. These individuals know the landscape, the families, and the subtle changes that signal danger, a new face asking suspicious questions, unusual movements at odd hours, or a sudden change in local dynamics. They become the eyes and ears on the ground, providing real-time, actionable intelligence to the military. This transforms the fight from a game of catch-up to one of pre-emption, dismantling terror cells before they can strike.

The Golden Minutes: The Need for Rapid Response

In a terror attack, every second is a lifetime. The delay between an attack in a remote village in Niger State or a market in Borno and the arrival of army reinforcements can be the difference between a contained incident and a mass casualty event.

A CBARS unit, stationed within its Local Government Area and equipped with arms, communication gear, and rapid-response vehicles, can be mobilized in minutes. Their primary mission is not to engage in prolonged firefights but to provide an immediate, organized response to secure the area, protect civilians, and frustrate the attackers until the military arrives. This "first responder" capability will save countless lives and deny terrorists the time to execute their plans unchallenged.

A Unified, Nationwide Front: Equipment and Readiness

For this to work, the CBARS cannot be a poorly equipped vigilante group. It must be a standardized, professional force.

Training: The Nigerian Military will be responsible for a rigorous training regimen in counter-terrorism tactics, intelligence gathering, civil relations, and the rule of law.

Funding: A joint funding mechanism from the Federal and State Governments will ensure uniformity in equipment, salaries, and logistics, preventing the squads from becoming politicized or under-resourced.

Structure: Each of the 774 Local Government Areas would host a CBARS unit, linked to a central command at the state level, which in turn is integrated with military operations. This creates a seamless, nationwide security network.

Terror Prevention through Omnipresence

The mere existence of a vigilant, officially-sanctioned security unit in every community is a powerful deterrent. Knowing that every community is a hardened target, with trained personnel ready to raise an alarm and respond, makes the country a significantly less attractive operating ground for terrorists. This strategy shifts our posture from defense to active denial, preventing attacks before they are even conceived.

 Reclaiming Our Territory

The war on terror cannot be won by the military alone. It is a national struggle that requires a whole-of-society approach. By empowering our communities, leveraging local knowledge, and creating a rapid-response infrastructure that covers the entire nation, we can finally turn the tide.

The Community-Based Anti-Terror Response Squad is not just a security strategy; it is a statement of national resolve. It is the embodiment of the truth that the people are the ultimate guardians of their own peace. Let us equip them, train them, and integrate them into our national security architecture. It is time to build a Nigeria where no community is left waiting for help, and where terror finds no sanctuary.

Let's discuss this! Share your thoughts in the comments below on how we can advocate for this initiative.

The Place of Osanyin in Yoruba Spiritual Life: Guardian of Leaves and Hidden Cures





Among the many divinities honoured in Yoruba tradition, Osanyin stands out as the keeper of secrets tucked away in roots, leaves, and bark. He is the Orisha of herbal medicine, the patron of healers, and the spirit believed to whisper knowledge of nature’s pharmacy to those chosen to wield it.

 

Osanyin is often depicted as a one-legged, one-eyed, one-armed figure, an image that symbolises his unmatched focus and mastery. Nothing distracts him from the mysteries growing in the wild. In Yoruba cosmology, these physical features do not denote weakness; they highlight the divine intensity with which he guards the powers of the forest.

 

Herbalists, known as oníṣègùn or babaláwo, often invoke Osanyin before gathering medicinal plants. They believe every leaf has a spirit, and only the Orisha’s blessing ensures the medicine works as intended. His staff, the Opa Osanyin, decorated with birds perched at its crown, represents spiritual surveillance and the ability to perceive unseen dangers. The birds symbolise witches, forces of nature, and invisible energies that interact with human life.

His worship is rooted in respect for the environment. Devotees see the forest not as wilderness to be tamed, but as a living library. Rituals dedicated to Osanyin emphasise balance—taking only what is needed and offering prayers in return. His shrines, often placed under large trees, are reminders of the bond between humans and the earth.

Osanyin’s story also teaches about humility. Though he holds the deepest knowledge of herbs, Yoruba myths say that no single Orisha can solve every problem alone. Even Osanyin’s medicine reaches its full potential when guided by wisdom, character, and cooperation among the divinities.

In today’s world, where modern medicine and traditional healing often intersect, Osanyin’s legacy continues to thrive. From rural herbalists to urban spiritual practitioners, many still honour the Orisha whose domain is the life hidden in leaves. His place in Yoruba belief remains a testament to the enduring respect for nature, ancestral knowledge, and the unseen forces that sustain welleing.


 

Aje: The Yoruba Spirit of Wealth, Prosperity, and Divine Balance

Yemi Olakitan                              Among the revered deities in Yoruba spirituality, Aje occupies a cherished place as the Oris...