How I Died, Buried & Resurrected Before I was Crowned King – Nigerian Traditional Ruler, Eze Onyensoh Revealed
Eze-Obidiegwu-Onyensoh
Credit: Punch
Credit: Punch
In an exclusive interview with Punch Newspaper, the 
traditional ruler of Nri Kingdom, Anambra State, His Majesty, Eze 
Obidiegwu Onyensoh (Nri Enwelana), has given insight into his kingdom 
and shared some rather shocking norms and traditions behind ascending 
the throne.
Eze Obidiegwu who is the 26th Eze Nri in the kingdom, said he ‘symbolically’ died
 and was buried for three days before he was crowned king, adding that 
the method of ascending the throne is not by election, but by divinity.
Read how he narrated it all below;
“In this kingdom, for you to be an Eze Nri, you also have to 
die. The candidate for the Eze Nri must die symbolically, and after 
three days, the person will wake up. During the person’s death, he takes
 a new body and when he wakes up, he must shine like a star.
“What I am telling you may sound like exaggeration but I tell 
you, it is the truth! The candidate must die! When the candidate dies, 
he will be buried in a shallow grave for three days; his body will be 
buried, but his head will be left outside the grave. During that period,
 he will undergo a transformation; pass through a stage, from human 
being to spirit, after which he will wake up and his body will be 
adorned with white chalk (Nzu) and he will shine like a star. From 
there, he will leave his father’s compound.
“He will not leave through the door. It is presumed that he has
 grown above passing through the door. They had to put a ladder for me 
to climb over the fence and I landed outside and I left my father’s 
compound. This happened like 28 years ago.
“While you are in the grave, you are being mourned by your 
family and the entire village will be in festive mood, eating and 
dancing every day. After that traditional mourning, when you wake up 
again, you take a new body and you are now a spirit. So when you have 
taken a new body, you go to a confluence river. The nearest to our 
community is the Ezu River, which is in Aguleri. At that confluence, 
they employ divers, who go down deep into the sea to scoop clay, which 
would be used to mould a pot. The Eze will drink from it and we call 
that pot, Udueze.
“After the Eze has drank from it, the pot would be seen as a 
very precious pot because the clay used in moulding it was got from the 
depth of the sea, from a confluence of two rivers. When the divers go in
 there, they would want to test your agility and spirituality as an Eze.
 If the diver does not come out, well, that is it! But if the diver 
comes out with the clay that would be used in moulding the pot, then you
 are Eze (king).
“Around our place here, we have two confluence rivers where an 
Eze Nri could be taken. There is Lokoja and there is Aguleri. Since 
Lokoja is far from us, we have to go to Aguleri, that is Ezu na 
Omambala, Abanaba.
”From there, you will visit all communities that are 
descendants of the Nri Kingdom and then you go home triumphantly as a 
king. Then you embark on another visit to Umueri clan, which contains 
118 settlements. You have to visit as many as you can, and they will 
know that a new Eze Nri has emerged. After then, the clans will now 
return the visit to Eze Nri, where the Eze Nri will settle in his Obi 
(domain) and receive them. During that period, the Eze Nri will stay in a
 hut that is akin to half room, and will return to the spirit world for 
eight days, before he will now become a human being again.
“While he is in that spiritual state, he does not receive 
visitors because he is still a spirit. But after the two market weeks of
 eight days, he could receive visitors. But before then, no one sees 
him, he is served food from underneath the door; no one is permitted to 
see him physically. When he leaves the Obi after eight days, he moves to
 his palace, which at that time, must not be a zinc building but would 
be built by a certain leaf, called Uma, which is usually broad. That is 
where he would stay for two years before his palace would be changed.
“Also, we have a kind of system that when a traditional ruler 
passes on, we have to stay seven years without a king. Those seven years
 will give the people time to know which person would occupy the throne.
 They would look for signs and signals.
“One section of the community produces, and then another does. 
There are three villages here. So the lot fell on my village to produce 
the traditional ruler and my village needed someone who would occupy the
 seat. In 1987, while I was in Port Harcourt, my people invited me home 
and I came, only to be told that the position of Eze Nri had shifted, 
and that I was likely going to be the person to occupy the throne. Our 
method to determine who would become the king is not through election; 
it is divine.
“We would have to perform what we call ‘Afa’ (divination). The 
gods would have to say who it would be. Whoever the gods appoint for 
that position cannot refuse it. The gods were consulted and the lot fell
 on me. I could not believe it. I was like, ‘how can a poor man be the 
traditional ruler?’ I was a young man and I had nothing. I had just 
returned from the US and was looking for a way to earn a living. Let me 
also say that before you become a candidate for Eze, you must have taken
 all the titles.
“I had not taken any title then, so I had to start taking all 
the titles one after the other. I finalised it by taking the Ozo title. 
When that ended, I took a higher one – the Oba title. The long and short
 of it is that there are so many titles one has to take to become Eze 
Nri. You have to visit all the shrines in this community and all the 
ancestral homes. We are the descendants of Eri. All the Eri communities 
and all the shrines in the communities had to be alerted of the 
emergence of a new Eze Nri. It took us about three years to take all the
 titles.” 
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