Africa Development, Volume XLV, No. 3, 2020, pp. 53-76
© Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa, 2021
(ISSN: 0850 3907)
The Return of the Gods?
Trends and Implications of the Rising
Popularity of Fetish Rituals and Occult
Practices Among Nigerian Youth
Jacinta Chiamaka Nwaka*
Abstract
In his seminal 1993 work The Embattled Gods: Christianization of Igboland
1841–1991, Ogbu Kalu argued that the gods of African traditional religion
were dislodged from their stronghold but not completely defeated. Could
the rising popularity of fetish rituals and occult practices among the Nigerian
youth over the last two decades mean the return of these gods? Using
historical analytical methodology, this article examines the rising influence
of fetish rituals and occult practices among youth in southern Nigeria. It
recognises the current attraction of the occult world as a subtle form of youth
resistance to financial and social insecurity engendered by the modern state
system in Nigeria, as well as youth resistance to the money-making ethos
of ‘prosperity gospel’ evangelism. The article argues that, while the surge in
youth engagement in ritual and occult practices may appear to be a form of
re-traditionalisation, such cultural revisionism can better be described as an
instrument of youth resistance.
Keywords: Nigeria, youth, fetish rituals, occult practices, African traditional
religion, missionary Christianity
Résumé
Dans son ouvrage fondateur de 1993, The Embattled Gods: Christianization
of Igboland 1841–1991, Ogbu Kalu soutenait que les dieux de la religion
traditionnelle africaine avaient été déchus de leur piédestal mais pas
complètement vaincus. La popularité croissante des rituels fétichistes et des
pratiques occultes dans la jeunesse nigériane au cours des deux dernières
décennies pourrait-elle signifier le retour de ces dieux ? Par une méthodologie
* Department of History and International Studies, University of Benin, Nigeria.
Email: jacinta.nwaka@uniben.edu