Oya - dance

Oyá is the Orisha of wind, storms, lightning, and death. She guards the gates of the cemetery and is the only Orisha who does not fear the dead. Her dance is the most dynamic, physically demanding, and dramatically powerful in the Orisha repertoire.

Dance Character

Oyá's dance is wind made visible:

  • Fast and spinning — the body is in constant motion, turning, swirling, never settling
  • Multiple directions simultaneously — the arms, skirt, and body move in different directions at once, like wind moving in a vortex
  • Sudden changes — the direction and quality of movement shifts without warning
  • Dramatic power Oyá is terrifying and magnificent; her dance has presence that commands the entire space

Key Movements

  • Fast turns and spins — rapid, continuous spinning with arms extended; the layered skirt flares outward dramatically
  • Arm sweeping — both arms sweeping in opposite directions simultaneously, creating the impression of wind
  • Sudden stops — mid-spin the body freezes completely, then immediately resumes at full speed
  • Skirt manipulation — the multi-colored layered skirt is swept, gathered, thrown, and spun as an active part of the dance
  • Lightning gesture — sudden sharp strikes of the arm, like lightning through the storm

The Iruke

Oyá dancers carry the iruke — a horsetail whip (often made from a real horse or ox tail). It is swept, shaken, and cracked during the dance, adding sound and visual drama. The iruke represents her power over the spirits of the dead.

Colors

Oyá's colors are nine — she wears multicolored clothing, particularly burgundy/maroon combined with other colors. The visual complexity of her dress amplifies the chaotic beauty of her dance.

Relationship to Changó

Oyá is Changó's principal warrior companion. When they dance together — Changó as thunder, Oyá as wind — the effect is overwhelming. The two dances complement each other: Changó explosive and directed, Oyá swirling and omnidirectional.

Toques: Oyá Bembé, and path-specific variations