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Osinbajo to Launch Yoruba World Centre at UI on Tuesday

The Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, will arrive Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, on Tuesday, November 23, 2021, to launch the Yoruba World Centre, situated inside Nigeria’s premier university, the University of Ibadan.
The event, according to a release by the project’s visioner, Chief Alao Adedayo, publisher of Alaroye newspaper, will hold at the John Paul II Hall, starting from 11a.m.
To  join Prof. Osinbajo at the historic occasion are Governors of South West, the Ooni of Ife, His Imperial Majesty, Oba Adéyeyè Enitan Ògúnwùsì (Òjájá II), the Alaafin of Oyo, Iku Baba Yeye, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi III (chairman of the occasion), and many eminent Yoruba leaders.
According to Adedayo, the project signposts a new chapter in the advancement of Yoruba culture, history, tradition and values.

A brainchild of the International Centre for Yoruba Arts and Culture, INCEYAC, the three-in-one occasion, will feature the opening of the Centre’s temporary abode, the presentation of a full documentary on the Yoruba World Centre, and the laying of the foundation at the permanent site by the Vice President.

Chief Alao Adedayo
Chief Alao Adedayo

When completed, the Yoruba World Centre will have a standard library; an archive; a museum; a recreation, reconstruction and digital centre; broadcasting and film village; and an artificial forest (Zoo), Adedayo, a member of the Board of Trustees of INCEYAC, explained.

Speaking on the purpose and significance of the gigantic project, the publisher of Alaroye newspaper, said “the centre will serve as a one-stop shop that offers old, new, recreated and reconstructed materials for researchers, lecturers, students, authors, journalists, historians and members of the public interested in Yoruba history, arts and culture, as tool for nation building, national cohesion, and mutual understanding.”

Although he said that the project is an idea whose time has come, he lamented that vibrant and vast as the Yoruba race is, it has “no single institution anywhere in the world where researchers, or anyone at all, can stay to conduct and complete works on the history, arts and culture of the Yoruba people.

“Being the largest user of Yoruba language (in print) in the world today, and because of our daily interactions with the language, arts, culture and history of the people, through our newspaper-ALAROYE, we can confirm that there is no such institution in the entire world.In addition to providing a good ambience for researchers, the Yoruba World Centre, as a knowledge centre, will help Nigeria and Nigerians in the onerous task of nation building.”

Adedayo, therefore, urged all Yorubas, at home and in the diaspora, to support the centre.

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