Frantz Fanon:
The future will have no pity on those who possess the exceptional privilege of being able to speak the words of truth to their oppressors but have taken refuge in an attitude of passivity, of mute indifference and sometimes of cold complicity!
Sad Trust;
Isese has the highest number of practicing members but they have been compelled by the society to practice in secrecy because of movies like this,only few bold ones can practice publicly.
Even your spiritual leaders still run to their family Orisa when things go bad.
It’s your Pastors/ Prophets that are caught in such act, maybe that’s what Jesus taught them so that people can come into their churches and pay Tithe to enrich themselves.
@jay_mikee and his family members can’t shot movies about this to educate the Public.
📹: @channelstv
Boda Lawrence , Eku ojo meta o
Edakun, why is evil now represented by Yoruba spirituality while good is represented by Christianity?
In Isese, we believe in the existence of good and evil looto but we are sincere enough to know that no religion or people is entirely good or bad
"Agbara Nla" when it's time to fight fictitious battles but when terrorists with real guns and serious wickedness show up, Jesus power is no longer superpower and you start calling Trump.
Stop denigrating Yoruba culture.
If someone portrayed Jesus in bad light, you will be offended. Why are you doing it to others?
Jesus said to do to others what you want them to do to you.
That’s exactly the problem. You keep presenting your religious beliefs as objective facts and everyone else’s beliefs as “darkness.”
Who decides what is light and what is darkness? Christianity? Islam? Judaism? Hinduism? Traditional African religions? Every faith believes it possesses the truth.
When you say “Jesus is above every other name,” that is your belief as a Christian, not an established fact accepted by humanity. Muslims reject it. Jews reject it. Hindus reject it. Traditional worshippers reject it.
So let’s stop pretending this is some neutral battle between light and darkness. What is actually happening is that one religious worldview is judging another and then calling that judgment objective truth.
And if Mount Zion truly celebrates Yoruba culture, why do Yoruba spiritual traditions almost always end up cast as the villains, the darkness, the demonic force that must be defeated? People are questioning that narrative because they can see the pattern.
These newly surfaced clips of my interactions with Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola are yet another reminder that my commitment to the struggle for justice, democracy, and the liberation of Nigeria did not begin today. Long before many of those now occupying positions of power found their voices, I was already on the frontlines of the June 12 struggle, standing with Nigerians against military dictatorship and demanding that the people’s mandate be respected.
The irony is striking: many of the opportunists, enablers, and pretenders who either opposed, ignored, or later hijacked that democratic struggle are now in positions of authority and seek to suppress those who remained faithful to its ideals. They may wield state power today, but history has shown repeatedly that repression cannot extinguish a just cause.
These clips are not merely historical artifacts; they are evidence of consistency. They show a young activist standing with the democratic movement when it was dangerous to do so, and they connect directly to the same principles that continue to guide the struggle today.
Those who now deploy the machinery of the state against dissent should remember that every generation produces its oppressors and its resisters. The oppressors enjoy temporary power; the resisters ultimately inherit history.
They will be defeated. The cause of justice endures. The struggle continues. #TakeItBack #Sowore2027 #SoworeForPresident
Its not free PR
The traditional religion is gaining more attention.
People are being set free from shackles of misrepresentation of their culture and Roots.
People are reconsidering the thoughts and fear that the movies have instilled in them.. They are being neutralized..
Ifá tí ń gbaye lọ
Iná adẹbọ kò kú, ó tún gbilẹ ni
Before people dont criticize xtian movies like this
Dont u see it?.
If God of Jacob and Isaac is worthy to be worshiped, let people do so out of pure love truth and right motivation; not false narration and morbid fear
John 4:24
God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth."
While Brazilians proudly celebrate Yorùbá culture and spirituality on one of the world’s biggest stages, like Carnival, Mount Zion is still recycling the same tired propaganda to demonize it.
Instead of educating people, they’re feeding decades-old stereotypes to a gullible audience while calling it ministry. We’ve outgrown that narrative.
Please find a different hustle abeg. This propaganda is getting old.
Even if Mike Bamiloye buys Netflix, YouTube, Prime Video, and every cinema in the world, any movie that demonizes Yoruba culture, traditions, and spirituality will be challenged.
The old propaganda is tired and outdated. The era of portraying Yoruba spirituality as evil while presenting foreign beliefs as the only path to truth is over. People are more informed today, and these narratives will no longer go unquestioned.
For decades, films like these have profited from attacking Yoruba traditions and indigenous spirituality. Yet many of the problems facing society today remain unsolved despite all the preaching and propaganda.
Mike Bamiloye and his team should carefully review this movie before release. If it promotes the same old stereotypes against Yoruba culture, expect strong criticism, public scrutiny, and global opposition from those determined to defend their heritage.
Respect your faith, but stop turning Yoruba culture into the villain of every story.
So this woman sang all these songs we sang on our School Assemblies grounds , Primary and secondary school ?🙁.
If you fall into this my generation say Hi !
For decades, Mike Bamiloye built his fame and ministry by consistently denigrating Yòrùbá ancestral beliefs, traditions, customs, and spirituality, projecting them to be ineffective and weaker compared to "Jesus Power" all for the love of his own Christian religion.
In The Gods Are Dead, our sacred ancestral Òrìṣàs and traditional sacrifices are portrayed as powerless and demonic. A whole village’s way of life and cleansing rituals are reduced to darkness that must be destroyed by foreign faith.
In Agbara Nla (and its upcoming remake), traditional spiritual powers, babalawo consultations, and elements tied to our heritage are framed as evil forces, while only Christian power is shown as the “ultimate” solution.
This is not just storytelling. It is the systematic painting of Yòrùbá ancestral beliefs as inferior and satanic, while you keep eulogizing the imported beliefs that is ancestral to the importers.
Many Yòrùbá people are now awake. Mike Bamiloye, you do not have to tear down Yòrùbá people’s sacred heritage to promote your Christian beliefs. Portraying Yòrùbá spiritual beliefs as evil, powerless, and satanic must stop.
You should instead shift your gaze on the politics and indiscipline happening in the church because that is where the real evil happens.
Our Yòrùbá culture and ancestral wisdom is not to be disrespected. You have achieved so much empowerment and fame through the same Yòrùbá cultural beliefs that you hate so much and now is the time to stop. Mike Bamiloye, PLEASE STOP.
#YorubaPride #ProtectOurHeritage #StopDemonizingYorubaCulture
Your father built a career making films that repeatedly portray African spirituality as darkness, and now you’re carrying the same torch while pretending it’s just about “exposing evil.”
If you’re serious about exposing evil, make films about slavery, colonialism, church abuse, financial exploitation, and the atrocities committed in the name of Christianity all over Africa too. Until then, stop pretending this selective storytelling isn’t propaganda.
Here we go again with the same stupid, tired propaganda.
Mount Zion and others need to understand that the era of demonizing Yoruba culture and spirituality is over. People are educating themselves now, and these old narratives will no longer go unchallenged.
Respect your faith, but stop turning Yoruba culture into the villain of every story.
For over three decades, films like this have profited from portraying Yoruba spirituality as evil while presenting foreign religious worldviews as inherently good. Yet many of the social problems facing society today clearly weren’t solved by that propaganda.
Mike Bamiloye built a successful career from this formula, moved his family abroad, and now returns to sell the same story again. The difference is that people are now asking questions, and many are no longer willing to accept these portrayals without scrutiny.
“I don’t talk to Odunlade, I don’t talk to Femi, I don’t talk to Toyin and everybody in the industry”
Wallahi e be like say Aunty Bukky Wright don see who pass her 😂
Wumi Toriola madness pass OMOTARA JOHNSON own oo 🤣🤣🤣