Tag: home

  • How to be happy in your home (2)

    Dear Reader,

    It is a wonderful time in God’s presence. Last week, I started sharing with you on how you can be happy in your home. This week, I will be teaching on Hospitality: the Gateway to a Happy Home.

    What is Hospitality?

    Hospitality is the friendly, generous reception and entertainment of guests or strangers, especially in one’s home. It is the willingness to share, with discernment, what God has given you. This includes sharing your home, finances and food with others. Hospitality is an attitude of stewardship, knowing fully well that you do not own anything but you are merely the caretaker and God is the real owner.

    He desires that you share His love with others, and all these must be done in reverence and gratitude to Him. Likewise, in relationships, you can be hospitable yet honour the boundaries of others; sharing all you have without strings attached. This will convince them that you are a Christian thereby leading to the growth of the Church. The Word of God says: Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares (Hebrews 13:2).

    Hospitality also enables you contribute to the development and growth of your family, friends, and fellow Christians; it is the door to discipleship. Without hospitality, discipleship will be limited because it is an integral part of the Great Commission that Christ gave us as a Church. (Matthew 28:18-20). You must be willing to go beyond your defined needs, comforts, and ideals to provide an environment that contributes to the physical and spiritual growth of people around you. Furthermore, we must understand that hospitality is not a gift; rather, it is a call to us all!

    One of the most important calls that Christ gave His church is to show hospitality towards people. We are His ambassadors who He uses as His welcoming arms to draw people from outside into His presence! He is the Seeker; we are the ones He seeks, and sometimes we are the ones He uses to seek others (It is God’s desire that all His children be saved, yet it is only a few that accepts His grace). It is the role of the Holy Spirit to save people, and we are the instruments through which He works. So, we must be a church that welcomes not only believers, but also those who may never have been inside a church before. This ministry of hospitality is about being His ambassador on the earth.

    As a single person, you can also be hospitable. Rebecca was a perfect example of hospitality. When Abraham’s servant came to Mesopotamia to take a wife for Isaac, he said a prayer to God:…Let it come to pass, that the damsel to whom I shall say, Let down your pitcher, I pray you, that I may drink; and she shall say, Drink, and I will give your camels drink also: let the same be she that you have appointed for your servant Isaac; and thereby shall I know that you have showed kindness to my master (Genesis 24:14). Abraham’s servant knew that Isaac belonged to a hospitality addicted family. Thus, he prayed for a kind and hospitable wife for him.  He knew that any woman who would offer water to a stranger and his camels would be a hospitable person. The criteria for his choice were not based on possessions, height, beauty or education; but a warm and loving heart.

    Singles who are hospitable will certainly welcome their life partners unknowingly. Do you believe God for a life partner? How hospitable are you? The choice is yours!

    Let brotherly love be the reason for reaching out to others (Romans 12:10/13). Brotherly love makes hospitality easy, it makes you want to reach out to others and give them a helping hand and it is also what makes you want to share what you have with others. This was the strength of the first century church; no one had a need among them. Those who had, eagerly distributed to others who had none; they shared all things in common (Acts 2:44-45). As a result of this display of brotherly love, God’s power was evident in their midst. You need to be sold out to hospitality; it’s the path to God’s presence in your marriage and home.

    However, the grace to be hospitable is available when you give your life to Christ. You do this by confessing your sins and accepting Jesus as your Lord and personal Saviour. If you want to receive this grace, could you please say this prayer of faith with me? “Dear Lord Jesus Christ, I come to You today. I am a sinner. Forgive me my sins and cleanse me with Your Blood. Deliver me from sin and satan. I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Make me a child of God today. Thank You for accepting me into Your Kingdom.”

    Congratulations! If you prayed this simple prayer of faith with me, you are born again and you are now a child of God. He loves you and will never leave you. Read your Bible daily, obey God’s Word and seek Christian fellowship (John 14:21).

    With this, you are guaranteed all-round rest and peace in Jesus’ Name!  Call or write to share your testimonies with me through contact@faithoyedepo.org, 07026385437 OR 08141320204.

    For more insight, these books authored by me are available at the Dominion Bookstores in all Living Faith Churches and other leading Christian bookstores: Marriage Covenant, Making Marriage Work, Building a Successful Home and Success in Marriage (Co-Authored)

  • Praises as Ogunbusuyi goes home

    Praises as Ogunbusuyi goes home

    Families, friends and loved ones had showered tributes as the final burial and funeral service of the late Pastor Isaac Oluwadare Ogunbusuyi and the late Deaconess Rachael Omobolaji Ogunbusuyi was held in Ido-Ekiti Ekiti State.

    Pastor E.A. Jeje, who preached at the event, praised the deceased, saying they had lived a fulfilled life. He advised the children to learn from the lifestyle of their late parents and grandparents and continue to exhibit good virtues they had bequeathed to them while on earth.

    The event was held at Christ Apostolic Church, Oke-Aanu Zonal Headquarters, Olorunsogo, Iyedi in Ido-Ekiti.

    One of the children of the deceased, Hon. Deji Ogunbusuyi appreciated God for the good life his parents had lived, saying they will continue to be remembered.

    A relation of the family, Prophet Sam Olu Alo described the deceased as people who had lived exemplary life. He said the deceased had shown love for God through their dedicatedness to the work and ministry of the church. He urged the children and the entire members of the family to continue to live in unity.

    One of the daughters, Oluwatoyin said in her tribute: “Papami, I am short of words to describe how I felt on the breaking news about your death. Though we fight and settle but then I will never forget the moments we have shared together as father and daughter. I pray that your soul rest in perfect peace. I love you papami”.

    The late Madam Rachael died on October 28, 2010 at the age of 62 while her husband, Pastor Oluwadare died on January 23, this year at the age of 72. They were survived by children and grandchildren.

  • How to be happy in your home

    Dear Reader,

    I welcome you to another glorious month in this our year of exemption and I see you moving from one level of glory to another in Jesus’ name. In this sixth month, ushering us into the midst of the year, wherever you have experienced shame before now, I see God converting it to glory and perfecting all that concerns you in Jesus’ name.

    All through this month, I will be showing you How to be Happy in Your Home. This week, I will be focusing on: How to get the best of times in your family life. The Bible says: The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity; but a wounded spirit who can bear? (Proverbs 18:14). It is joy on the inside that brings out the best in a man. Happiness in your home will bring out the best in your wife, husband and children.

    A sorrowful heart is dangerous because nothing good comes the way of the dejected. A merry heart doeth good like a medicine: but a broken spirit drieth the bones (Proverbs 17:22).

    When there is no happiness in a home, the family members are prone to all sorts of sickness and diseases. Which do you choose? Do you want to stay happy and make every member of your family happy, thereby staying away from hospital bills, or to continue spending your money and resources on drugs and medical bills? “Wisdom is profitable to direct,” the wise man said. My family members and I choose to stay happy and be drug-free.

    What is Happiness?

    Happiness is a state of enjoyment, showing satisfaction or joy. It is also marked by pleasure.

    In most cases, when you are happy, your disposition is characterized by laughter as joy surges out from within you. Also, laughter is a feeling of triumph or sense of well-being. When you are genuinely happy, no one needs to ask you. You just flow in it, and it shows.

    What does it take to be Happy?

    The Psalmist says: …Blessed is every one that feareth the Lord; that walketh in his ways. For thou shalt eat the labour of thine hands: happy shalt thou be, and it shall be well with thee (Psalms 128:1-2). Also, Proverbs 28:14 says: Happy is the man that feareth always: but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischief. We can see from the two Scriptures above that happiness comes by fearing God, reverencing His voice via His Word, obeying His instructions and doing what He commands us to do. ‘Fear’ in this context is not talking of being afraid, rather it connotes respect for God and His Word.

    What then are some of the secrets of a happy home life? The right answer could be given in just one word Christ. Christ is the secret of a happy home and whatever He says should be your guiding principles the remaining days of your life.

    As a man, and the head of the home, if you walk in the understanding that you have a Head (Christ), who sees you and your actions, you will hold Him in reverence. Whatever He tells you to do; you will do without questions or grumbling. As a wife, though your husband is the head of the home; God is your ultimate head. Therefore, you must hold His commandments in awe. Rather than being in subjection to your husband only, obey the commandments of God through your husband, to show your reverence for Him and His Word. As you do this, your children, who are watching will learn from you. They will be proud to have a God-fearing woman as their mother, and will, likewise, learn to obey God.

    Also, to maximize happiness in our homes, we have to consider these:

    Home is a residence.

    It is one of the most sacred places.

    It is a sanctuary into which men flee from perils and alarms.

    It is a resting place to which, at the close of day, the weary retire to gather new strength for battle.

    It is a place where love learns its lessons, life is schooled into discipline, and character is moulded.

    Christ is the key to a happy home. Therefore, if you are not born again, you have to confess your sins and accept Jesus as your Lord and personal Saviour. If you are ready for this new birth experience, please say this prayer of faith with me: “Dear Lord Jesus Christ, I come to you today. I am a sinner. Forgive me of my sins and cleanse me with Your Blood. Deliver me from sin and satan. I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Make me a child of God today. Thank You for accepting me into Your Kingdom.”

    Congratulations! If you prayed this simple prayer of faith with me, you are born again and you are now a child of God. He loves you and will never leave you. Read your Bible daily, obey God’s Word and seek Christian fellowship (John 14:21).

    With this, you are guaranteed all-round rest and peace in Jesus’ Name!  Call or write to share your testimonies with me through contact@faithoyedepo.org, 07026385437 OR 08141320204.

    For more insight, these books authored by me are available at the Dominion Bookstores in all Living Faith Churches and other leading Christian bookstores: Marriage Covenant, Making Marriage Work, Building A Successful Home and Success in Marriage (Co-Authored).

  • Why we ran away from home, by rescued kids

    Why we ran away from home, by rescued kids

    Two teenagers who fled their parents’ homes in Abuja have been rescued by Rapid Response Squad (RRS) operatives in Lagos.

    They were reunited with their parents at the weekend, a statement by the police said yesterday.

    Chidubem Amaechi, 13 and Chinedu Onyebuchi, 13, were picked up by the police after they got off a bus from Abuja at Ojodu-Berger.

    According to the police, the duo fled their homes last Sunday and were invited for interrogation by the police after they were seen wandering.

    Initially, they were said to have lied to detectives that they were kidnapped, blindfolded and brought to Lagos. The police said the teenagers alleged that they escaped from their kidnappers, who were sleeping under a bridge on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, by the Ogun State boundary.

    But after three days, the teenagers were said to have confessed that they fled Abuja in search of a better life to help their parents.

    A source said: “The officers later moved the boys to the RRS Headquarters, where an investigation into their alleged kidnapping was launched immediately. While the investigation progressed, officers suspected the children were lying about the kidnapping story.

    “Their parents, who have been looking for them in Abuja since May 14, were shocked when contacted that their children were in the custody of RRS in Lagos.

    “It took three days of questioning before Chidubem Amaechi opened up that he and Chinedu Onyebuchi connived to leave Abuja because of the poor state of their parents.”

    Amaechi said: “We noticed that our parents were suffering in order to take care of us. We decided to come to Lagos and work for some time. Whatever we are able to raise in six months, we would hand over to our parents for them to start business.

    “We realised that the hardship was too much and that we would be helping them if we left our families in Abuja in search of better opportunities in Lagos.

    “I brought my N4,200 savings while Chinedu added N500 as transport fare to Lagos. We were already in Lagos before we realised that we were simply being stupid. We were wandering about when the officer invited us for questioning.”

    Handing over the teenagers to their parents, RRS Commander, Olatunji Disu, an Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), begged them to monitor the kids.

    The boys promised to never run away from home again.

  • Developer takes home ownership to the grassroots

    Developer takes home ownership to the grassroots

    Amid  growing concern of stakeholders on the lingering housing in the country, some industry players have seized the bull by the horns to ensure that Nigerians do not become homeless. And while most developers are concentrating on highbrow areas for estate development, a young and upwardly mobile developer is gradually taking homes to the majority of Nigerians who truly need a home.

    The firm of realtors and investment firm, Pertinence Nigeria Limited, promoters of the ABC and VIP Gardens Estate, said it is gradually achieving its objectives by building houses for Nigerians through the purchase of large expanses of land at places people had thought could not be developed. In this regard, the firm said it is  contributing its quota by reversing the housing shortage in the land.

    The Founders and Executive directors of the firm, Sunday Olorunseyi and Wisdom Ezekiel, in a chat with The Nation, explained that Nigerians have come to realise that  owning a house is a personal responsibility, such that waiting for government to help them in this regard would mean waiting till eternity given its huge responsibilities and cash constraints.

    According to the duo, Pertinence is assisting Nigerians by reducing the costs associated with home ownership, some of which are things that the firm has taken off a prospective house owner. For instance, Ezekiel explained that owing to financial constraint, his firm has been able to acquire large expanse of land which are then divided into plots and sold at reduced prices.

    Besides, he explained that Nigerians have decided to solve their own housing problems by themselves; hence, they get involved in monthly savings to acquire land- an option his firm readily provides a platform for.

    “This is an indication that the market is yet to attain its potential, but in a place like Lagos State, for instance, the deficit is gradually closing up, because people now realise that you can start building a house with N50,000, and that is now being entrenched in other parts of the country,” Olorunseyi said.

    The executive directors of the Lagos-based firm, who spoke at the super promo launch organised by their company last weekend in Egbeda area of Lagos State, said it is in realisation of this desire and to ease life for Nigerians that the firm put together the promo so as to put smiles on the faces of some prospective home owners. In the promo, six plots of lands were given out in a raffle draw to lucky winners.

    The super promo launch, they explained, is their own little corporate social responsibility to the society.

    “This is our own way of appreciating our teeming customers for believing in us since we started business about five years ago. We are giving out six plots of land in any of our estates and all expense-paid return ticket to Dubai to winners today. We are doing this to help people to become home owners. We have done this for about five times now”, the co-founders stated.

  • ‘Ndigbo, come home to be counted’

    The Southeast caucus of Inter-Party Advisory Council, (IPAC), the umbrella body of registered political parties in the country, has called on all eligible Southeasterners to come home and be counted during the census. The group said that when the people of the geopolitical zone take part in the forthcoming census, it will help to ascertain the actual population of Ndigbo and also help in the distribution of infrastructure in the area.

    The body also called on the Federal Government to unconditionally release the detained leader of the Independent People of Biafra (IPOB) Mazi Nnamdi Kanu in obedience to a court order.

    IPAC, after a two-day retreat in Umuahia, the Abia State capital, condemned what it called the “frequent and indiscriminate shootings and killings of innocent IPOB/MASSOB and unarmed protesters by security agencies who maintain a lackadaisical indifference in handling the armed and murderous Fulani herdsmen issues”.

    A 10-point communiqué issued after the retreat, drew attention to “The activities of the Fulani herdsmen in communities in the zone,” and called “on the Federal Government to demonstrate a sincere commitment to eradication of this menace so as to erase the perception of bias and injustice”.

    The communique was signed by the chairman of the caucus and Abia State Chairman of IPAC, Prince Emeka Okafor and IPAC chairmen in Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo states.

    The communique said that true federalism would be achieved by amending the constitution to devolve more powers to the states and give them more control over natural and human resources located in there, saying that such would make the states more viable and productive.

    The communiqué called, “On Southeast governments to work urgently towards creating a conducive environment for living, industry, investment, tourism and trade, including the full establishment and functioning of the South East Nigeria Economic Commission which will facilitate integration, harmonization and cohesiveness of infrastructure and economic development of the South East Nigeria”.

    It also called “On all South Easterners in various parts of the world to urgently invest their resources in the South East for the purpose of building a strong regional economy”.

    On NNAMDI Kanu, the lamented the continued incarceration of the IPOB leader, and called for his unconditional release in compliance with the court order and also to show a genuine demonstration of the ‘change’ agenda of the Federal Government”.

    The IPAC said, “We condemn the frequent and indiscriminate shootings and killings of innocent IPOB/MASSOB and unarmed protesters by the security agencies and maintain a lackadaisical indifference in handling armed and murderous Fulani herdsmen.

    “IPAC South East associates herself with the fight against corruption by the present administration and equally commended the release of funds for the purpose of payment of salaries and pensions”.

  • Leave it at home, compatriot, leave it at home!

    Leave it at home, compatriot, leave it at home!

    Oro po ninu iwe kobo [There are innumerable words (even) in a cheap tabloid]
    A popular saying dating back to the beginnings of newspapers in colonial Nigeria
    What lies behind us and what lies ahead of us are small matters compared with what lies within us Ralph Waldo Emerson

    How many of those who will read this piece will follow the advice, the injunction in the title of this week’s essay? Probably close to zero. At best, a number countable only in single digits. Leave one’s cellphone or smartphone at home when one goes out? What a futile and even cranky proposal, most would say. So why am I in all seriousness making the suggestion? Well, that is the question. However, before we get to this underlying question, we have first, to ask another question and this is: how, in the first place, did it arise, my advice, my plea that people should leave their cellphones and smartphones at home every time that they go out? Oro po ninu iwe kobo!

    For the answer to the question behind the underlying question that prompted the idea for this piece, I have to start by telling readers about what normally should be a quite unremarkable fact: for the first time ever, I bought a smartphone last month. Incidentally, this fact reveals as a blatant lie my friend, Femi Osofisan’s “revelation” that my cellphone is a very cheap and primitive Nokia. This “revelation” was made in a tribute that FO recently wrote to mark my 71st birthday anniversary. Up until about a month ago, what FO said about my Nokia cellphone was absolutely correct. But that is no longer the case, alas! For years, even for decades, FO with the active collaboration of my other great friend, Yemi Ogunbiyi, had done all that he could to get me to replace my old phone with a “proper phone”, a “real phone” as they put it. Yemi’s shaming teasing of me on account of the beloved Nokia cellphone was merciless. In the company of people I barely knew and/or who barely knew me, Yemi would display my discarded cellphone for all to see with the cutting commentary of, “look at his phone, a whole Harvard professor”!

    FO’s “strategy” for shaming me into discarding the redoubtable Nokia contraption was less dramatic than Yemi’s, but it was no less spirited. In his case, he was in addition deeply affronted by the loudness of my ancient Nokia phone, as if the very fact that something so cheap would dare to be so offensively loud was a great and insufferable outrage. This feeling of FO was worsened by the fact that, as he has now informed the whole world in his recent tribute to me, I had and still have a habit, a tendency not to answer phone calls, no matter the decibel of the loudness of the ringtone. [More on this later]. Once, without my permission and my knowledge, FO went so far as to take it upon himself to reduce the loudness of the phone’s ringtone to a buzz that was closer to a whisper than a muffled whistle. Of course, when I discovered what my friend had done, I restored the ringtone of the phone to its lordly decibel and secretly enjoyed my friend’s frustration. My phone is my phone is my phone, if you please!

    But strange and powerfully affecting is the unrelenting war of friends like mine to rid one of habit(s) deemed unworthy! To this day, I can offer no explanation other than Femi’s and Yemi’s conjuration for what happened one day last month when I accompanied a friend to a SLOT franchise outlet – and suddenly, on an impulse I had absolutely not anticipated, I decided to buy a smartphone and did so on the spot. The rest, as the saying goes, is history, a tantalizing or confounding history. Where I never once lost or misplaced the old Nokia, in less than a month that I have had the new smartphone in my possession, I have on three occasions had to run or drive back like a madman to a place where I had absentmindedly left my new smartphone. The most recent episode of this drama took place only yesterday, Thursday, January 5, 2017. So far, I have been lucky and have recovered the phone before it was picked up by a “lucky” finder. But how long will the luck hold? And how can I drill into the nerve cells of my memory or my mind the fact that I no longer own a Nokia contraption but a real, ultramodern smartphone? Or, as a matter of pragmatic reasoning, why not leave the smartphone at home every time I go out? That is the underlying question of this piece, compatriots.

    You see, dear reader, it had never been my habit or practice to carry the old Nokia phone around with me everywhere I went. As a matter of fact, even in my own house, I neither had it with me all the time nor made it habit to have it on my person in one of the pockets of my clothing. Indeed, quite often, it was the ringtones of a phone call that enabled me to locate where the phone was in the house. And then, I buy this expensive smartphone and old habits collapse and things begin to fall apart, so to speak! I begin to take the smartphone with me everywhere I go. And I begin to absent-mindedly leave the phone in some places – three times in one month, the first month of my possession of the phone! Consequently, I am forced to think back to why I had for so long stuck to the Nokia phone and resisted all the spirited stratagems and efforts of my friends to shame me into buying into the world and the habits and the rituals of those who have smartphones and/or iPhones. And I discover, to my amazement, that the first law, the first obligation of smartphone owners and users is that you do not ever, ever leave the phone at home when you go out. Nobody told me of, or formally inducted me into the rigid operation of this “law”. I had seen it operate, silently but implacably, and had internalized it, absolutely without being conscious that I had done so. That is the central problem in this discussion, compatriots: internalization of habits and dispositions of which one is barely conscious.

    In the last one month that I have had this new smartphone – and lost and found it three times – I have rediscovered why, for a very long time, I had stuck to my old, ancient, even antediluvian Nokia phone in complete rejection of smartphones and the protocols and rituals that they seem to impose on their owners and users. Permit me to put this rediscovered aversion to the social universe of smartphones and their uses in the simplest manner possible: I hated it that one had to spend so much time with and on the phone at all times of the day, absolutely without any exception. Another way of putting the matter is to say that I found smartphones massively intrusive in the daily, even hourly sociality of my fellow citizens. The “worst” cases pertain to those who have two or three smartphones and rather punctiliously and/or happily attend to the demands, the impositions of their multiple smartphones.

    Yes of course, they have no problem with having and using many smartphones, so what is my own business in the matter, you might ask. It is a fair question. But so also is it fair for you, dear reader, to accept and affirm my own right not to have to be with and on the phone at all times of the day if that is what I choose. That was my choice when I had the Nokia cellphone. The most consequential of the expression of that right was my habit of not taking the phone with me everywhere I went and not answering all or even most phone calls that I received. [Let me qualify the actual workings of this “right”: during the day, I get a great deal of missed calls; later in the course of a day, I try to return as many of the missed calls as I can] When I bought that smartphone in early December 2016, this right was put under severe pressure. This essay is a first attempt, admittedly prompted by FO’s tribute on my 71st birthday, to reflect on what this experience means, for me in particular but hopefully for all of us.

    FO in that tribute correctly says that I am very jealous of my privacy and often resent any and all attempts to break down or into my privacy. [Actually, he expressed the idea in much stronger language, saying that I am often “fanatical” in the protection of my privacy. This is true, but why should my friend be the one to reveal my “fanaticism” to the whole world?!] To privacy, I would add “interiority”, this being the inner space of thoughts, feelings, introspections and imaginings that we all constitutively have as human beings and ought to take every step possible to cherish, nurture and protect. In an often quoted statement that serves as the second epigraph to this essay, here is what Ralph Waldo Emerson, one of the great American neo-Romantic writers had to say on the significance of this space of human individual and collective interiority: What lies behind us and what lies ahead of us are small matters compared with what lies within us”.

    The past history of our planet and our species is vast beyond measure and so is the infinity of the future that lies ahead of us. And yet Emerson avers that they are small matters in comparison with what lies inside of us. There is no doubt that this claim is hyperbolic. But it is deliberate and exemplary hyperbole. What Emerson is arguing is the idea that if we do not know what is inside of us, we cannot really know what lies ahead of us. What does this mean?

    All societies and cultures of the past in all the regions of the world to varying degrees recognized that human beings have a vital need to know and be in connection with the inner life of their psychic, emotional, intellectual and spiritual selves. It is necessary to emphasize the common human dimension of this point because, ordinarily, it is a select group of thinkers, artists, visionaries and psychics that are credited with the will and the capacity to cherish and protect the interior spaces of their personalities and identities. There is also this: this inner space of Being, this interiority that all human beings have, is morally neutral; it is filled with and by both good and evil, both the impulse for creation and that for destruction. We can direct or channel it to the good, the beneficial only if we stay in touch with it. It is impossible to overstate the need for this in a society like ours that is so full of needless hardship, suffering and despair.

    Compatriot, it may seem like a mad injunction, but for heaven’s sake, leave your smartphones at home, unless of course you are a barber, a tailor, a bricklayer or the CEO of a big business enterprise who, in order to stay on top of things, has to have your cellphone or smartphone with you all the time. For the thousands or even millions among us who do not belong to any of these groups, leave your phones at home when you go out and you will once again have the chance to connect with your inner life. I promise you a liberation that will astonish you. And who knows, you/we may even start a movement!

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • Food items for  motherless babies’ home

    Food items for motherless babies’ home

    It was a moment of joy at the Beth Torrey Home for Mentally Challenged Children,  Amuwo-Odofin, Lagos State when the founder/President, Gracious Mums, a non-governmental organisation (NGO), Lady Adaobi Peters Ekwefi paid a visit to the home and presented the inmates with various items such as foods, beverages  and other relief materials.

    The president was accompanied to the home by members of the association. They were treated to melodious songs by the children.

    According to the Matron of the home, Mrs Veronica Obi, the Beth Torrey Home for Mentally Challenged Children is one of the oldest homes in the Southwest and Nigeria.

    Making the presentation, Lady Adaobi said orphans were important members of the society, saying the organisation would continue to support them.

    She said the gifts were presented  to enable them to celebrate the Christmas and to make them happy during the coming New Year.

    She further said the project was conducted as part of the association’s activities to celebrate the Christmas and to mark its first year anniversary. She added that they decided to celebrate the day with the kids so as to support them and make them happy.

    Lady Adaobi said the NGO was established in order to promote society’s oneness, impacting lives morally and financially, shelter the homeless, support society by providing for the needy, empowering the youth, members and general public through organising symposium and fitness and wellness programmes.

    She called on well-meaning Nigerians to show love to motherless babies, saying such gesture would give them a sense of belonging.

    “If we look at what is happening in our society at the moment, I believe children can have a better deal. Every child deserves quality education and a better life. Apart from the government, we all need to support underprivileged children in our midst,” she said.

    While receiving the items on behalf of the home, Mrs. Obi thanked the association for the gesture. She said the home was established in Nigeria by an American woman many years ago. She also said the home takes care of children who are physically-challenged and abandoned.

    She appealed to members of the society to continue to assist the motherless babies’ homes to enable them to take care of the children.

     

     

     

  • Simba Group unveils solar home inverters

    The Simba Group has launched the Luminous Solar Home Inverters to combat the fluctuating power supply and the rising cost of electricity.

    Head of Operations, Simba Group, Mr. Rajneesh Gupta said: “This is a revolutionary product that uses Intelligent Solar Optimisation Technology (i-SOT) and i-Charging to ensure efficient solar utilisation, whilst also drawing on electricity or generator supply if available.”

    He explained that the product’s proprietary intelligent algorithm cuts electricity supply where available, if solar power is sufficient. It does this, all the while, ensuring that battery backup is not compromised in the event of power failure.

    Gupta said unlike other solar home kits, which are power direct current-powered equipment, and require external charge controllers, the Luminous Solar Home Inverter powers AC appliances which features are built into a unit.

    He said the products are available in 850VA and 1.5KVAs, to address household power needs. “Luminous customers have seen the remarkable benefits of this product in action, the unique product has helped its users save significant amounts on diesel bills by reducing the generator running times to very few hours,” Gupta added.

    Similarly, those who get electricity from the grid, Gupta said, will save about 30 per cent on their monthly bills.

    The company announced that the new solar inverters would not be sold at a higher price than their non-solar counterparts for three months.

  • NPFL 2016/17 SEASON: Enyimba to play home matches in Calabar

    NPFL 2016/17 SEASON: Enyimba to play home matches in Calabar

    • The People’s Elephant  have no problem facing Sunshine in season opener

    Enyimba have chosen to play their home matches for the next league season at the UJ Esuene Stadium, Calabar as their permanent home as the Enyimba International Stadium, Aba is still undergoing repairs and won’t be ready for the start of the season.

    The Chairman of the People’s Elephant, Felix Anyansi Agwu who revealed this to SportingLife on Saturday  during the NPFL 2016/17 season draws held at the Golden Royale Hotel, Enugu, said they will feel more at home in Calabar than any other alternative available to them.

    He said they would like to play where it is devoid of competition and where they will be fully concentrated on the game and not other distracting things.

    Anyansi Agwu pointed out that there was nothing special in being drawn to face Sunshine Stars in the season’s opener and that they would prepare for the Owena Whales the same way they will do to other clubs they will trade tackles with after the Akure Gunners.