By Chief Victor Mbalewe
THE coronation of Eze Sir Iheanacho Chinyereze Mbalewe, scheduled for Saturday, 27 December 2025, at Community School, Okwunakuwa, will be a grand cultural spectacle that will celebrate the rhythm, identity, and ancestral heritage of Uvuru and the wider Mbaise nation.
From the first drumbeat that will echo across the venue, indigenous music and dance will announce the soul of the ceremony. Cultural troupes from Uvuru’s villages and neighbouring Mbaise communities are expected to deliver captivating performances that will transform the coronation ground into a living theatre of Igbo tradition, where history will be expressed through movement and sound.
Indigenous dance is a living heritage
Each dance performance communicates meaning beyond entertainment. Through carefully choreographed steps, chants, and drum patterns, performers will honour ancestors, celebrate kingship, and reaffirm unity among clans. Traditional instruments – including talking drums, metal gongs, slit drums, and flutes – will guide the dancers, reinforcing the sacred rhythm that defines communal life in Mbaise.
The regalia to be displayed will reflect deep cultural symbolism. Beaded crowns, patterned wrappers, cowries, eagle feathers, and symbolic body markings will represent lineage, honour, and spiritual authority. Female dancers will embody grace, continuity, and fertility, while male performers will project strength, vigilance, and communal responsibility.
Dance, memory, and meaning in Igbo cosmology phenomenal
At the coronation ceremony, dance will serve as a language of memory; indigenous performances will recount stories of migration, settlement, resilience, and leadership – reminding the audience that the Eze Oha institution is rooted in shared history and collective destiny.
Traditional dance displays are expected to draw admiration and reverence
They will introduce a sacred dimension to the celebration. Regarded as embodiments of ancestral presence, these performances will symbolise continuity between the living and the departed, as well as ancestral endorsement of the new reign.
The cultural atmosphere will bridge tradition and tomorrow
This segment of the coronation will underscore a central philosophy of the reign of Eze Oha III: progress anchored in tradition. As elders, youths, dignitaries, and guests from across Nigeria and the diaspora gather, the performances will affirm that Uvuru’s development agenda will draw strength from its cultural foundations.
For the younger generation, the dances will function as living classrooms, reconnecting them with traditions often threatened by modern influences. For elders, the celebration will stand as a reassuring testament that the cultural soul of the community remains vibrant and protected.
This coronation is a grand festival celebrating the richness of our culture. As the final drumbeat fades, the coronation will stand out as more than a royal ceremony; it will emerge as a cultural festival that affirms identity, unity, and continuity. The indigenous dances of Uvuru and Mbaise will not merely entertain – they will consecrate the moment, ushering in the reign of Eze Oha III with ancestral rhythm and collective hope.
In Uvuru, culture will not be performed for spectacle alone; it will be lived, honoured, and passed forward, ensuring that a kingdom that remembers its dance will always remember its direction.

