In Ijebu-Ode this year, culture didn’t just show up – it moved. It moved through colour, through rhythm, through generations. It moved in the synchronized elegance of the regberegbe, in the confidence of tailored Aso-Oke, in the sound of drums echoing heritage into the present. At the centre of it all, Orijin didn’t just take part. It amplified the movement.

Ojude Oba has always been a powerful cultural gathering. However, 2026 carried a deeper meaning. Following the passing of Oba Sikiru Kayode Adetona, the festival returned in a moment of transition – not of silence, but of continuity and of celebration. What unfolded was a powerful reminder: culture does not pause. It evolves.
This year, it did so boldly.

From the pavilion to the streets, culture revealed itself not as something preserved but as something actively expressed in fashion, presence, and energy.

Away from the main arena, the Orijinal Village became the pulse point of that expression. More than a gathering spot, it was where culture found a new rhythm – one shaped by a generation redefining what it means to belong.

Here:
Style was storytelling
Music was identity
Presence was performance
Young Nigerians showed up not just to celebrate culture, but to interpret it – confidently, creatively, unapologetically.
The Village didn’t just host the moment. It scaled it!

As day turned to night, the energy only intensified. Performances flowed from Fuji legends to modern sounds. DJs took over. Crowds responded. And somewhere in that exchange, something powerful happened: Different generations met – not in contrast, but in sync. The past didn’t disappear. It evolved.

Within the Orijin Village, that evolution took a different form – more curated, more refined, yet equally rooted. Here, culture was experienced through Taste, Atmosphere and Shared moments. It was proof that expression isn’t one-dimensional – it stretches from the streets to more intimate, crafted experiences.

Outside the performances, another layer of the movement unfolded. Creators, influencers, and everyday attendees turned moments into content – capturing culture as it happened and pushing it far beyond Ijebu-Ode. What was once local became global. What was once observed became shared, and in real time, Ojude Oba became more than a festival. It became a cultural signal.

At Ojude Oba 2026, Orijin didn’t just show up as a sponsor. It created the conditions for culture to move. Through the Orijinal Village, the brand enabled: Participation over observation, Expression over preservation, and Connection over consumption
As Dorcas Mashingil, Brand Manager, Orijin, puts it:

“Culture today is not just remembered – it is expressed. Through Orijin, we’re creating spaces where people can show up fully, celebrate identity, and make culture their own.”

As the music faded into the night and the colours settled into memory, one truth remained: Culture is not static. It lives, it shifts, and it moves with the people who carry it. At Ojude Oba 2026, Orijin stood at the centre of that movement – not watching it happen, but helping it happen.

Ifeoma Okeke-Korieocha is the Aviation Correspondent at BusinessDay Media Limited, publishers of BusinessDay Newspapers. She is also the Deputy Editor, BusinessDay Weekender Magazine, the Saturday Weekend edition of BusinessDay. She holds a BSC in Mass Communication from the prestigious University of Nigeria, Nsukka and a Masters degree in Marketing at the University of Lagos. As the lead writer on the aviation desk, Ifeoma is responsible and in charge of the three weekly aviation and travel pages in BusinessDay and BDSunday. She also overseas and edits all pages of BusinessDay Saturday Weekender. She has written various investigative, features and news stories in aviation and business related issues and has been severally nominated for award in the category of Aviation Writer of the Year by the Nigeria Media Nite-Out awards; one of the Nigeria’s most prestigious media awards ceremonies. Ifeoma is a one-time winner of the prestigious Nigeria Media Merit Award under the 'Aviation Writer of the Year' Category. She is the 2025 Eloy Award winner under the Print Media Journalist category. She has undergone several journalism trainings by various prestigious organisations. Ifeoma is also a fellow of the Female Reporters Leadership Fellowship of the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism.

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