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Yoruba Language Program

Yoruba is one of the three official languages of Nigeria.

There are about 20 million speakers of the language in the Southwestern part of Nigeria. It has about twenty dialects, which show phonological and lexical differences. Some of these dialects are spoken around the border of Nigeria and the Republic of Benin, and some parts of Togo. 

The language has also survived in Cuba (where it is called Lukumi) and in Brazil (where it is called Nago). The Yoruba language is widely spoken in Sierra Leone, Venezuela, Trinidad, Tobago, Puerto Rico, and Haiti. Yoruba is a language of significant interest to linguists across the globe.

Yoruba classes provide students with the spoken knowledge of the language and cultural practices of the people. The skills demonstrated by mastery of Yoruba language and culture are valuable to employers and graduate programs, and fluency in Yoruba is sought by government agencies and international non-governmental organizations. 

At the University of Michigan, our students are eligible for highly competitive undergraduate Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowships. If you have prior experience with Yoruba, please contact Gabriel Ayoola (gayoola@umich.edu) for enrollment guidance.

Hear from our students

Meet the Yoruba Instructor

Gabriel Ayoola holds a PhD in Comparative Literature and Intercultural Studies from the University of Georgia, Athens; and an MA in African Languages and Literature from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is from Nigeria and a native speaker of the Yoruba language.

In addition to teaching the Yoruba language at U-M, he also teaches classes in Black World Studies at the Department of AfroAmerican and African Studies. 

Email: gayoola@umich.edu.