PEOPLE AND THEIR CULTURE, NABO DAY AT ABAK
Abak Local Government Area today, 29th December,
2018 observe her traditional festival tagged “NABO”.
Everywhere in Africa there are always certain
traditional practices that are peculiar to each people. In some cases this
practice may have certain instances that shows its affinity with that of
other/another people far or close by, while in many of the instances it has
shown a complete different practice that defines what the inheritors of such a
tradition understand as the best way of defining themselves. Where there is a
kind of cultural affinity shown by any people’s traditional display with that
of another people, it becomes explicit to directly maintain that both
communities are related historically. This is not the case with Nabo
traditional festival in Abak Local Government of Akwa-Ibom.
Nabo is claimed to be a masquerading
festival, but the entire activities differ from what obtain elsewhere where
masquerades are being celebrated. By supposition, nabo day should evoke the
presence of different masquerades showcasing the historical emblem that
characterised each community within the inheritors. Other than this, what is
seen every day that nabo is celebrated are able-bodied men, basically young
ones within the active population rate, moving about with their faces painted
in blue. They tie palm frond on their heads or waists.
Naturally, nabo is a festival of bloodshed
celebrated on the last market day of the Abak people. Other Anang settlements
have their similar blood seeking festivals celebrated at different times of the
year. All the festivals take similar shape and remarkable with the intrusion of
the artistes to the market of each inheritors’ community where they perform
certain rituals to mark the end of the blood feast. Women are usually forbidden
from showing up at the mystic point of nabo, while other communities of the
Anang sect forbid the appearance of women at major streets, markets and
observable distance on the last day. The penalty for disobeying this order by
any woman is death.
Presently due to civilization and
Christianity among the inhabitants, noabo does not involve practical killing
any longer. The image above is usually the real body of a corpse used to mark
the festival. In the present time, they use plantain body to design an
artificial corpse as shown above to contain such view. But, perhaps because the
festival has been dedicated to bloodshed, there is always the spontaneous
feeling on the activists to spill blood on every nabo day. Where it appears difficult,
certain intangible issues would arise and lead to a serious fight during which
blood drops. It happens this way every year.
The Historical Relevance of Nabo Festival
The only historical relevance that nabo
informs is demonstrated via the machete they artistes bear as they parade the
streets of Abak. The significance of the machete is not only historical, as may
have argued, but has and still contributes immensely in defining the Anang man.
Like totemic symbols to many historically conditioned people, machete is
significant in the socialization of the Anang people. As revealed by a version of their oral
tradition, the Anang believed that their ancestors were remarkable with the
dealings that involve machete. Being the instrument with which their ancestors
defended themselves in their early days of hobo, when they were expunged by
their Ngwa brothers, it remains that the attainment of maturity by any Anang male
children is marked by the possession of a personal machete. With this, it is
believed that one could defend himself and his future family against any
attack. To them, one is not mature until
one possesses a machete of one’s own.
Another historical relevance of nabo and its
similar festivals among the Anang settlement is marked with the infesting of
the inheritors’ markets to mark the end of the festival. This was invented to
ward off several misconceptions resulting from the zest to fulfill certain
ritualistic obligations in another man’s land. Originally, before such festivals
took place in the ancient times when the Anangs were a handful population, men
were sent to Aba Ngwa (presently the abode of the prestigious Ariaria market in
Aba). There the envoys of the Anang community would perform rituals of
remembrance of place of origin, then the envoys would return before the
festival commenced. As people continue to multiply and intentions continued to
change from good to evil, the venue of this ritual was changed to each
community’s market.
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