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Ourembaya is a village Mandinka people village of Guinea located 12 kilometers south of Kankan.

Toponymy
Ourembaya village is also known as Ourambaya, Ouranbaya, Ourembaia and Ourimbaya.

History
Ourembaya has been a historic village in Guinea for centuries .. Historical writings Samori Toure demonstrate the importance of Ourembaya in the region

Moreover, he is known by the legend of Ourembaya Balla of Laminigbe Bayo (Guinea) and of Ramatta Diakité (Mali).

Geography
Ourembaya is located 380 meters altitude, on the right bank of the Milo, the main river that crosses the Upper Guinea and becomes the River Niger (or  Djoliba  in Mandingo), when he enters the Mali.

It is limited:
 * north by Dabola (Kankan) 9 min in car and at a distance of  5.6 km;
 * to the northeast by Sadia (Kankan) 17 min by car and at a distance of 12.8 km;
 * to the south-east Tintioulen (Kankan) 30 minutes by the national road 1 over a distance of 29.1  km, and by a local route in 39 min over a distance of 30.1 km;
 * to the south by Ouleke-Kiniero to 6.7 km, by Sirimaya at 8.6 km and southwest by Borofian at 18.6 km, by Balandou at 3 min by car and at a distance of 2.2 km and north-west by Makono at a distance of 30.7 km through the the national road 6.

Climate
Ourembaya has an Aw type savannah climate according to the Köppen classification. The mean annual temperature is 26.2° C. Precipitation, much more in summer than in winter, is on average 1083.9 mm.

Demographics
The Ourembayakas - inhabitants of Ourembaya - speak Malinké. In 2013, the population counted 1719 people including 150 students, 454 out of school people and 41 children under 7 years old.

Transport
Ourembaya is accessible:
 * by air transport via Kankan;
 * by road transport;
 * by canoe from Makono;
 * by train previously via the Conakry to Kankan railway.

Economy
Ourembaya is a predominantly agricultural village. Its inhabitants mainly cultivate fonio, cassava, yam, mahogany, shea butter, etc. Market gardening is a sector undergoing modernization.

Breeding is also practiced.

Culture
The Ourembayakas practice  doundoumba  (or  dundumba ), also called "the dance of the strong men ”.

The feast of the ponds is the festive period of Ourembaya. Indeed, as in several other Guinean localities, the ponds are considered as mystical and cultural places where the residents practice traditional fishing only once a year, before proceeding to a ceremony invoking the divinities of these ponds, from which they hope the graces.

Sacred mask of the Malinkés, the  Kondén  appears at the end of the Ramadan celebrations and all the villagers surround him Dave Kobrenski, « Konden », in Djoliba crossing : journeys into West African music and culture, Artemisia Books, New Hampshire, USA, 2013, p. 136-139 ISBN 9780982668900.

U.D.O : Union Diaspora Ourembaya
U.D.O is the association aims to bring together, the diaspora of Ourembaya, friends and supporters of the village of Ourembaya, with the aim of developing Ourembaya on all levels: educational, scientific, cultural, socio-economic and environmental.

Education
Ourembaya's first public primary school was established in 1959 and a new modern college was established in 2017.

Places of worship
There are three mosque s in the village.

Liens externes

 * site officiel

Category:Guinea