Precolonial Ngwa land were practitioners of
African religion and worship their gods as part of their culture. Yam, maize, cassava, cocoyam, vegetables, oranges, palms, fruits make up majority of the food crops. The men in Ngwaland are the only people allowed to speak at the main village meetings where the affairs of the people are discussed while married women hold village meetings where internal affairs were discussed and these meetings also served as savings clubs. Ngwa people practice polygamy. The Ngwa people believe in procreation and reincarnation and believe that childbirth through marriage is the only means of reincarnation. The Ekpe and Okonko secret societies served as moral enforcement societies in pre-colonial Ngwaland, as decisions reached by the lineage council was enforced by them. The Ekpe and Okonko society were introduced to Ngwaland through
Aros and originally from their neighbours in Cross River. The
Okonko Society was reserved strictly for men. The young unmarried women are sometimes inducted into
mgbede to undergo a nutritional course aimed at fattening and preparing them for marriage to suitors. Ekpe and Owu masquerades are part of the each of year festivals in Ngwaland. Agwu-Ikoro, a part of the Ikoro farming festival is popular among the Mbutu villages in Ngwaland. The Ekpe dance festival is an annual religious festival among the Ngwa people (except for Obioma Ngwa) with influence in the
Umuahia and
Owerri axises. Originating from the
Aros, it is performed on the Eke market day. In
Obingwa, the Ikoro festival—a costume drama where the
Ikoro is used for its performance —is celebrated in place of the Ekpe.
Language and literature Ngwa dialect which is filled with idioms and proverbs is spoken in Ngwaland. It is used as means of communication in trade, folktales, community and village meeting and entertainment with the
Standard Igbo being the preferred language for administrative and educational purposes. The Ngwa dialect is classified it as an Igboid dialect under the New Benue Congo subfamily of the Niger Congo phylum and among the
south-eastern group of dialects.
Religion Prior to the arrival of the British, the Ngwa people worshipped the deities that were indigenous to their village which Chineke was and still is considered the most powerful in the pantheon of gods. Other gods include Ohanjoku and
Amadioha. Through the means of colonization, Christian missionaries converted most Ngwa people from their indigenous religious practice to Christianity particularly, the
Seventh-day Adventist,
Anglican and
Catholic. In the 21st century, majority of Ngwa people are Christians with very few practicing traditional Ngwa religion with
Okpuala Ngwa being the capital of such practices. == Economy ==