Abstract
Traditional societies are characterized by festivals of various kinds and dimensions. Some
distinctly manifest aspects of the community rituals or worship, some celebratory; yet others
function towards social change. Irrespective of their types, underlying the different forms of
community performance is likely to be found the central element of ritual associated with one
aspect of community belief or another. Among the Igbo of south-eastern Nigeria, Omerife is a
festival associated with the ritual of new yam celebrations. In a sense, the ceremonies of the
new yam are thanksgiving activities whereby the gods are propitiated with sacrifices for a
bountiful harvest as well as for a peaceful farming year. However, the festival also embodies
different community forms of performances such as the Ogene- nkirika. Ogene-nkirika is the
first part of the two-tiered festival. This paper examines the aspect of conflict that motivates the
process of social change on the theoretical premise of Theatre for Reciprocal Violence (TRV)
to foreground conflict as pertinent for change in the performance. Case study approach of
qualitative research method was adopted for data collection and analysis. The study reveals
that Ogene-nkirika festival performance is capable of engendering social change for the people
through conflict as reflected in the analysis