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190 At the Back of the Black Man's Mind By R. E. Dennett<br />

This would bring the introduction of the present Bini religion <strong>to</strong> the fourteenth century,<br />

or about 400 years after the founding of the kingdom of Bini by the son of the Alafin of<br />

AWYAW the great Yoruba king.<br />

This religion has taken such a vigorous root in the country that it is now very difficult <strong>to</strong><br />

find any trace of the older form of religion that must have been in existence among the<br />

EFA or people of this country before the coming of EWARE, or even the first Yoruba<br />

OBA. Interesting as the study of this superimposed religion may be among the Bini we<br />

are not likely, upon their own showing, <strong>to</strong> find it in so perfect a form as among the<br />

Yoruba. It is <strong>to</strong> IFE, the spiritual capital of the Yoruba country, that we must go if we are<br />

<strong>to</strong> rebuild up and reform this religion, which is, of course, now degenerated in<strong>to</strong> a kind<br />

of mythology.<br />

But there is one great lesson that we have learnt from this s<strong>to</strong>ry of the Bini, and that is<br />

that the completed religion is ruled by 201 EBAMI.<br />

It is interesting <strong>to</strong> know that before the destruction of the OBA'S palace each of these<br />

201 EBAMI had a bronze plate representing it on the walls of the great room as a record,<br />

but it is exasperating <strong>to</strong> think that in its destruction our chance of obtaining all the<br />

names by which they were known has gone. It will now take years of patient note-taking<br />

<strong>to</strong> collect them once again. No native that I have so far come across can give me more<br />

than a few of their names, just the most prominent ones, and just sufficient <strong>to</strong> let us<br />

know that they referred <strong>to</strong> sacred rivers, lands, trees, animals, omens, and the seasons.<br />

We have noted that both the Bini and Bavili in the first place recognise God under the<br />

names OYISA and NZAMBI.<br />

They then recognise that there are two great divisions among things and people. Those<br />

created which they connect with God (OYISA) and those procreated which they connect<br />

with the Devil (ESHU) as far as the Bini are concerned, and BANTU NZAMBI and<br />

BANTUA NDONGO so far as the Bavili are concerned. Things of the spirit and things of<br />

the body as we should say.<br />

Then we note that they divide things of the spirit in<strong>to</strong> three parts, and things of the body<br />

in<strong>to</strong> three parts or six parts in all.<br />

Then we have twenty-four powers representing the winds etc., as causative attributes<br />

under these two great headings.<br />

After which we have the six formulæ each of twenty-four powers which makes one<br />

hundred and forty-four parts in all, i.e., seventy-two parts under the spiritual heading<br />

and seventy-two parts under the procreating heading.<br />

And finally we have the twenty-four parts which are the results of the foregoing creative<br />

and procreative parts.<br />

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