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  • Among the Yoruba people, an ethnic group of some  52 million spread between Nigeria, Togo and Benin,  

  • one of the most flattering ways to describeperson is to say they have muchitutu.’ The  

  • word denotes a particular approach to lifeunhurried, composed, assured and unflappable.  

  • If a bus is late, a person ofitutuwon’t  shout or get in a dispute with a ticket vendor,  

  • theyll let out a minor sigh and pull a weary  smile. If the skies open just when theyve  

  • laid out chairs in the garden for a party, they  will - in their normal tranquil and unaffected  

  • way - simply take them all back in again. There  isn’t much that should rattle a person ofitutu.’ 

  • Crucially, ‘itutuisn’t any sort of divine  gift or chance trait. It’s a quality that can be  

  • cultivated and is the outcome of having absorbed  a particular view of existence. For the Yoruba,  

  • agitation and anger flow from a mistaken and  over-ambitious sense of what it lies in our  

  • power to alter. It’s when we believe that we  are more in command of external reality than  

  • we actually are that we respond to reversals  and frustrations with rage. The calm person  

  • ofitutumay be every bit as sad as their  hysterical counterpart about the delayed bus  

  • or torrential shower, but what underpins their  equanimity is a sense that trouble could not  

  • be skirted and must be accepted as belonging to  the order of things. In their noble resignation,  

  • a person ofitutudisplays a grasp of  another key term in Yoruba philosophy:  

  • ‘àṣẹ’ which we might translate as destinyexistence, or the cosmic order. What lies  

  • in the province of ‘àṣẹ’ can’t be altered  by any human will but an enlightened person  

  • should understand the direction of ‘àṣẹ’ and then  adjust their desires and ambitions accordingly

  • There is an important detail here: ‘itutudoesn’t  only render a person wise. It additionally makes  

  • them attractive, including physically attractiveand what we might callcool’ - which is why any  

  • self-respecting young Yoruba will strive hard  to adopt its outward signs, particularly when  

  • a distinguished local photographer like Rachidi  Bissiriou has offered to take one’s portrait

  • Many cultures retain a lingering suspicion that  being effective might rely on a capacity to be  

  • frantic and hot tempered. For the Yorubaagitation isn’t merely an offence to a  

  • proper understanding of the universeit’s also just horribly unfashionable.

Among the Yoruba people, an ethnic group of some  52 million spread between Nigeria, Togo and Benin,  

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