opele
{{More citations needed|date=June 2024}}{{Short description|Divination chain used in traditional African and Afro-American religions}}
File:Ifa divination tray ( Opele Ifa).jpg]]
An opele (spelled opuele or ocuele in Latin America) is a divination chain used in traditional African and Afro-American religions, notably in Ifá and Yoruba tradition.{{cite book|author=William W. Bascom|title=Ifa Divination: Communication between Gods and Men in West Africa|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CS0h4Ye9puUC&pg=PA33|date=22 March 1991|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=978-0-253-11465-5|pages=33–34}}
A babalawo (diviner) uses the opele in order to communicate with the deity of wisdom/knowledge in the Yoruba tradition (Ọrunmila), who is able to identify the causes and solutions to personal and collective problems and restore harmony in the person's life through re-balancing of the person's destiny and/or ori (personal deity). The opele is the minor divination tool used by babalawos for Ifá divination; it is believed to be an "assistant" or "slave" of Ọrunmila, who communicates Ọrunmila's desires to the babalawo and from the babalawo back to Ọrunmila. It is used for the majority of daily divination work. For divination regarding important ceremonial revelations or life-long information about a client or for very important decisions, babalawos elect to use their ikin seeds, which they consider to be the physical representation of Ọrunmila himself.{{Cite web|url=http://orishanet.org/consulta.html|title = Ifá Consultations|date = 20 June 2015}}
References
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Category:Yoruba words and phrases
Category:Traditional African religions
Category:Afro-American religion
Category:Objects used for divination
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