Orisarayibi Ogundamola: Ogedengbe of Ijeshaland
Aponlese 1, was the Owa of Ilesha at the time
the young leader to be born. It was customary for the Owa during this Ogun
festival to invite all the ‘babalawos’ (medicine men) in the Ijesha territory
to come and predict what will be the outcome of the new year to come.
It was at this meeting that one particular
‘babalawo’ predicted that on an ‘Isegun’ day in 1822, a child would be born in
the land, and he will deliver the Ijesha people from its oppressor(s). And when
the day came the Owa sent all his servants to all ‘igberikos’(satelite
villages) and as predicted by the ‘babalawo’, Ogedengbe was the only baby who
was said to be seen born on that day. After the naming ceremony, he was carried
from his father’s house in Ijoka Ilesha to Atorin his mother’s village, about
24 kilometres away from Ilesha Township.
History
has it that Atorin, towards the end of the 18th century, consisted of only six
to eight huts and an average estimation of 40 people. Cut away from the Ijesha
town, Atorin was a very poor village with a tiny connecting route to Ilesha
town. Because
of the circumstance surrounding his birth and the plan of the Owa to keep a
close eye on the young Ijesha saviour, it was said that he was pampered and
loved by his parents, and he was still breast-feeding at the age of seven.
Growing up, the young Ogedengbe was a rascal, known for his rude attitude
toward old people, and he had the very strange habit of calling his parents by
their first name with no care. Such was his wild behaviour before the age of
fifteen when he went on a voluntary exile, because of the personal assault he
encountered in a woman called ‘Salakenu’ a villager in Atorin reputable for her
witchcraft. He later fled to
Ilesha where he was received by his father and close associate. Due to his
rascally attitude and restlessness, he found a common cause with a popular age
group called the “Ipaye” which had an age range of 15-24 years. At 17,
Ogedengbe was elected the deputy leader of the group. As a socio-political unit
in Ilesha then, the “Ipaye” was responsible for cutting and fixing public
buildings like the Palace, the shrine, Market stalls, building and repairing of
roads and making sure orderliness prevailed in the town then. It was from this
group that Ogedengbe was catapulted into political limelight.
At about
the age of 35, around 1857, Ogedengbe decided to get married to a beautiful
young Ijesha woman called “Orisaleke” but the parents of the girl opposed the
marriage, simply because of Ogedengbe’s lifestyle, which was considered wild
and reckless then. Ogedengbe being who he was, forcibly took the girl from her
parents’ house damning the consequences. The matter was later reported to the
Owa, and Ogedengbe was sentenced to three months in prison. After his release, quite a number
of incidents sprung up that turned the young Ijesha man into a full war
general. Not only that, but one of the greatest in Yoruba land. One was the
liberation of villages surrounding Ekiti (Efon, Itaawure, and Oke-Mesi) from
their Ibadan oppressor, and also the 1867 attack on Igbajo by llesha and a
reverse attack on Ilesha by Ibadan, which forced the collapse of the Ijesha
army and the flight of Ogedegbe to Ita-Ogbolu.
And as time went on, his powers and popularity
were growing fast. Apart from his reckless, diplomatic and commanding
leadership, Ogedengbe was also said to have possessed great magical powers,
which came into full limelight during and after the Ekitiparapo war. His
encounters with Ibadan also proved the general in him.
The first was in 1864 when he was captured while
assisting in the defence of Ilara against the Ibadan troops, and the second
time was in 1867 when he was captured during the Igbajo war. It was during this
war a young Ibadan soldier severed Ogedengbe’s head off during the war, and the
Ijesha general staggered back, rolled, picked up the fallen head and fixed it
back on his body.
This made
his enemies terrified of his person. After this incident, he was captured by
Ibadan’s own General Bashorun Ogunmola, who decided to humiliate Ogedengbe by
disfiguring his face with Ibadan tribal marks, hoping someone will later take
him for an Ibadan man and kill him, but this didn’t happen. Ogedengbe learnt a
lot of military tactics, secrets and trainings while in captive in Ibadan. These
two occasions brought out the “general” in Ogedengbe. During the Ekitiparapo war, it
was said that Ogedengbe would stay in his house and fire arrows from his room
to the battle field, he was also known for his random disappearing acts, which
made him difficult to kill by his enemies. Known for his diplomatic and
charismatic attitude, he was also a fond addict of the native snuff called
“taba”. Being a war general, he didn’t trust people for fear of being poisoned,
so most times he normally sent his dog on errands to the market.
At that time in Ilesha, the sight of the dog was
abnormal because no one had ever seen a dog as tall and huge like that before.
Eye witness account says the dog was similar to a wild beast, while walking on
the road, people ran at the sight of the dog. He normally tied a sack of
cowries and samples of what he wants to buy around the dog’s neck, and the dog
goes to the market and walks straight to the ‘Iya Loja’s’ tent. The ‘Iya Loja’’ is the female head chief of the
market. The woman unties the rag around the dog’s neck, fills it with the
required goods and the dog returns to its owner. And as the dog returns to its
owner, the house owner of every house it passes must greet the dog saying, “
L’o gun ofe oooo”. Any house owner who doesn’t salute the dog will be reported
to Ogedengbe. Mysteriously, the dog disappeared after Ogedengbe died.
After the Ekitiparapo war and the great trouble
periods in the history of Yoruba land, Ogedengbe settled back in Ilesha, but
his band of war boys could not contain themselves to the new peaceful
atmosphere, they went raiding people, harassing and kidnapping innocent
citizens. This prompted Captain R.L Bower to arrest the war general in 1894
with his friend Prince Fabunmi, the Owa of Ilesha. Frederick Haastrup pleaded
passionately for the release of Ogedengbe and after much begging to Governor
Carter, he was released after a lengthy sum of £6,000.00 was posted for his
bail. Ogedengbe was conferred with
a chieftaincy title of Obanla of Ilesha in 1898, thus the highest mark for his
gallant achievements in the Kiriji/Ekitiparapo war. The restless, reckless and
powerful Ogedengbe now after so many years of war and fights, now became a
respectable chief and his service was now to the people.
Ogedengbe was no doubt one of the greatest war
generals who ever lived in Yoruba land. His great wisdom and diplomatic
war-like manners saw the Yoruba through the Ekitiparapo war. A real war master,
his study of war tactics and war weaponry were second to none. He is a straight-forward
man who always kept to his promises.
The Ijesha people will forever continue to
cherish his memory. A memorial was erected for him at the Obokungbusi Town
Hall. And the Ogedengbe Memorial School in Ilesha is a monumental masterpiece
in his memory. Till this day, he remains the greatest warrior in Ijesha land.
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