Tag: life

  • Do something to change your life, students told

    Do something to change your life, students told

    Students have been urged to stop complaining about challenges facing the country but to provide solutions. The charge came at a three-day youth empowerment programme held at Olympics Hotel in Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    Speaking, Dr J.O. Faleye, a lecturer at the Department of English Language, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, told the students to be solution providers, rather than complaining about their woes.

    While urging them to think big and start small, he said the government was not ready to take up their responsibility.

    “It is a pathetic situation we find ourselves in this country. The government is not living up to its billing. All of you here are the hope of the country. Although the problems are many and overwhelming, but you must stand firm and keep hope alive,” he said.

    Faleye told the students to be careful when choosing friends, saying: “Know the type of friends you share your dreams with and the activities you engage yourselves in because friends can make or mar your career.”

    Pastor Temitope Daniel of Stone Church in Ile-Ife told the students not to see failure as the end of a life.

    Taking the students down the memory of his days at the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), Daniel said determination and prayer were key to achieving success.

    He said: “In my first year as an undergraduate, I was a total failure. I started at the bottom of the class. This made me sit down and make a change to my academic pursuits. That failure changed my life. At the end, I was among the best students that graduated from my department.”

    Speaking on Born Identity, Dr Titilayo Ayotunde, a lecturer in the Department of Demography and Social Statistics, OAU, urged the students to always be prepared for difficulties in any endeavour they undertake in life but said prayers could conquer their fear.

    “You won’t get to the top until you have sacrificed your time, energy and money in the course of learning. The world of learning today has gone beyond restricting oneself to an area of study. The world “universal” connotes something that involves all, so you should learn something about virtually everything,” he said.

    Students from OAU, University of Ibadan(UI), University of Lagos (UNILAG) and Ekiti State University (EKSU), among others were present at the seminar.

    Funke Oshin, a student-entrepreneurs, said unemployment rate made her to start a business and employ people while in school.

    She said: “Today, I have trained a lot of people in businesses and these are not limited to students. The world has gone beyond academic certificate alone. One has to learn as many skills as possible to survive.”.

    The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Sort-Out Group, Opaleye Olaoluwa, said the purpose of the seminar was to bring out the best in youths through seminars, conferences, training and mentoring.

  • Life begins at 70

    Life begins at 70

    A journalist and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mathew Adewunmi Shoyebo, has turned 70. He celebrated his entry into the septuagenarian club with praise and thanksgiving in Lagos. NNEKA NWANERI reports.

    For Matthew Adewunmi Shoyebo, attaining the biblical age of three scores and ten, last Saturday, was a reason to thank God and celebrate His goodness.

    His children, grand children and political associates in the All Progressives Congress (APC) rolled out the drums for what they described as a milestone in the life of a man of many parts.

    To them, the Sickle Cell Centre auditorium, Idi-Araba in Surulere, Lagos, was the place to be that Saturday. Everyone who mattered to him stood to be counted at the event.

    It began with a service led by the Daystar Centre and Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Mount Zion Parish, Surulere, whose choirs led the song ministrations as well as the praise and worship session.

    The Area Pastor of the church, Olumide Salako, offered the opening prayer after which the celebrator’s wife, Beatrice, took the first Bible reading from Romans 12:1-5.

    A special hymn, “For my sake, and the Gospel, Go”, was sung for the celebrator. A brief sermon was given by the representative of the Senior Pastor of Daystar Christian Centre, Pastor Sam Adeyemi, Pastor Bolu Oluyomi, who spoke on the reasons Shoyebo, an engineer, was being celebrated.

    Pastor Oluyomi came in company of Pastors Tunde Adisa and Victor Akinyemi. One after the other, the pastors offered prayers for the family before the choir gave a special song. In between the worship session was a thanksgiving, where the celebrator led his family and other guests to drop their offerings in a basket at the altar.

    After the recessional hymn, “To God be the Glory”, the hall was re-arranged for the reception. The occasion also served as a platform to showcase their style.

    The Empire Band supplied music, singing praises of guests as they entered the well-decorated hall.

    The reception was chaired by Otunba Adeleke Adesina.

    Adesina described the celebrator as a man of many parts and a great family man. Others also took turns to give testimonials on Shoyebo.

    There were many other APC chieftains in the gathering, who came to celebrate with one of their own and added glamour and excitement of the occasion. One of them, Hon Segun Olakunle, proposed the toast, praying the celebrator should witness many more years.

    Deputy Chairman, Editorial Board of The Nation, Mr Tunji Adegboyega who officiated the cutting of the cake, described Shoyebo as a devout Christian and family man. He demanded that the three-layered simple cake be cut on the last count of JESUS on the spell of the last letter of JESUS.

    His children were the first to join him in the cutting of the cake. The birthday ‘boy’, who The Nation learnt is his grandchildren’s best friend exchanged hi-fives with them.

    Shoyebo’s joy could not be contained as he told of how God has been good to him. He thanked other APC supporters for the love shown him and admonished all to been in communion with God to give their lives a meaning.

    His wife, Beatrice, said it’s been wonderful being married to him for 40years, and has learnt from him to be confident in God and stand for the truth at all times.

    ‘Daddy Sho’, a name his first daughter calls him, is God-fearing; wife-adoring; children-caring and people-loving.

    Shoyebo began his career in the Nigerian Railway Corporation Ebute Meta from 1966-1970. He is also the author/publisher of Wanted: Genuine and Patriotic Politicians in 2003. Shoyebo was appointed member, Lagos State Drainage and Sanitation Board in 2005 and was the Chairman of the People Public Review of the 1999 Nigerian Constitution.

    In attendance were APC National Legal Adviser Dr Muiz Banire; former Ag Vice Chancellor of the Lagos State University Prof Ibiyemi Tunji-Bello; Hon Funmilayo Tejuosho; former Special Assistant to Governor Tinubu Hon Layi Olawale; Professor Tunde Samuel, who represented former Lagos State governor Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Chief Abel Shoyebo.

  • Healthy food, healthy life

    Healthy food, healthy life

    Nigerians have been told to move away from pills and procedures that treat symptoms to the healing power of foods.

    A trado-medicine practitioner, Dr Segun Fahuwa, said chronic diseases, such as cancer, heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, and pain, among others, are on the rise and no orthodox cures are in sight. The focus for these diseases should, now be healing through food.

    Dr Fahuwa, a.k.a Mister Guarantee said: “Some 2400 years ago Hippocrates, the father of modern medicine, stated, ‘Let food be your medicine and medicine be your food’. Today the use of prescription drugs and medical procedures that only manage symptoms is favoured over healing with food. By eating a healthy diet, the body will not be deprived of its natural immune boosters, which can ward off diseases.”

    According to him: “A healthy diet is probably going to cause you to lose excess weight; your blood pressure and cholesterol to go down; you will feel better and look better; have more energy; your cells will be happy; your immune system will get stronger; you will eliminate most or all of your medications and your God given healing process will have the ability to reverse sickness.”

    He said even if you do not go completely on a plant based diet, small changes can bring positive results. “When you eliminate most of the foods that are making you sick and replace them with the right fuel, live nutrient dense foods along with fresh juices, you will begin to see a healthier diet by making positive changes in your life.

    “Most of us are aware of the benefits of a balanced diet and healthy eating. But being aware of the benefits is only half of the solution. You also need to know how to choose the foods that will be best for your health. Depending on your daily routine, you may or may not eat at home most of the time. But whatever you choose to start your day off  with must be healthy.”

    Dr Fahuwas said: “Start your day with a healthy and well balanced breakfast. Studies have shown that people who don’t eat a full breakfast tend to seek carbohydrate snacks all throughout the day, and are more prone to gaining weight. Eating at home usually involves more meal preparation time, this is important because preparing a good meal takes a lot more time than simply eating some junk food. If you can afford to prepare your meals at home, this can dramatically increase the quality of your meals, not only can you choose exactly what you eat, but you can choose how it is prepared and pick out the quality of the items yourself.

    “Any meal you eat, whether at home or while out should consist of all the basic food groups, balancing proteins, starches, greens and vegetables is a key factor to a healthy diet. Your body needs all the different food groups in order to function properly, by balancing your meals you are ensuring your health and the quality of your life.”

    He spoke further on foods in super markets: “Choosing the food you eat based simply on the label at the supermarket is not always the best choice. A low fat or diet version of a favorite snack, treat or dessert may be a better option than the regular version, but is it the best option? Look for healthier alternatives for snacking in between meals, go for low fat cereal bars and natural products, fruit and juice. It is not so much the amount you eat but rather what you eat that makes the difference. Avoiding fatty foods and food with high quantities of sugar is also very important. Choose baked food instead of fried food, and adopt this healthier alternative when cooking at home as well,” he added.

    Dr Fahuwas said when away from home and eating out, look for healthy alternatives. “Fast food offers speedy advantages but often has no real nutritional value. Stuffing yourself with useless calories will fill you up momentarily, but you will soon find you are hungry again, and this can often lead to a vicious cycle, leading to high levels of junk food intake per day. Choose full meals whenever possible; look for whole wheat and organic products whenever you can. If you are on the run and need to eat as quickly as possible, look for the healthier alternatives to hotdogs, sawarma and burgers. Try natural sandwiches made on the spot, there are many natural fast foods that can be just as quick as the conventional ones, while providing much better quality to your diet,” he added.

  • Green: My life is in danger

    Green: My life is in danger

    The crises rocking  the leadership of Nigerian football has taken another twist as former NFF executive committee member, Chris Green has alleged that there is a threat to his life.

    Green, as well as former NFF President, Aminu Maigari and General Secretary, Musa Amadu were all arrested by operatives of the department of state security (DSS) last Tuesday just before the NFF congress was to hold.

    While revealing his ordeal to the House of Representatives committee on sports, Green claimed that he and Maigari barely escaped being assassinated.

    “What we went through is not something anybody can be happy about, as we were detained for hours without any charges brought against us.

    “When we were released at past 2am the following day, we were handed over to a group of unknown and heavily armed men but we refused to get on board.

    “Now I’m scared for my life because I know some people are out to kill me because we could have been assasinated that day,” he said.

    Meanwhile, in a statement released on Saturday, sports minister Tammy Danagogo explained why Green and his colleagues were arrested.

    “The arrest of Maigari and some other officials of the NFF by the DSS is part of its routine to investigate the fire incident and interrogate some suspects based on the report of officials of the NFF and therefore had nothing to do with the NSC as is being erroneously insinuated.

    “It is however, on record that the former Acting President of the NFF, Chief Mike Umeh had, immediately after the fire outbreak which raised part of the NFF secretariat in Abuja, said he suspected sabotage by ‘some people who are desperate to perpetuate themselves in power’ and called on the police to investigate the incident,” the statement read in part.

    Green also accused the sports minister of being the brain behind the NFF crises.

    “The problem of Nigerian football right now is my brother, the sports minister and it is quite unfortunate that he’s not here today,” he told the House of Representatives committee on sports.

    But Danagogo has denied being a part of the problem, and insisted that ‘We must ensure that peace is brought back to Nigerian football’.

     

  • My life as an ex-convict

    My life as an ex-convict

    A suspected female member of a four-man robbery gang allegedly terrorising residents of Ajegunle, a suburb of Lagos, has said that she not learnt nothing from the Kirikiri prison after spending four months in the facility for selling Indian hemp and other hard drugs. Rather, she said, the prison hardened her the more and she became a worse criminal than she had been before being sentenced to jail for four months.

    Thirty-five-year-old Juliet Albert, a native of Utu village, Egbema Local Government Area, Rivers State, said she would not have befriended Ugochukwu, the alleged leader of the gang if she had learnt any lessons from her stay in the prison.

    She called on government to focus on building prisons that can reform convicts and make them better citizens when they finish their terms, noting that most convicts take Nigerian prisons as higher institutions where they learn more about crime.

    Other alleged members of the gang include Francis Kalu a.k.a. Mopol (23), Jackson Imoh a.k.a. Airforce Bullet (23), Solomon Onyemaechi a.k.a. Soldier and Ugochukwu a.k.a. Navy.

    A police source said unknown to the suspects, the force men had been monitoring the activities of the suspects in Ajegunle, especially the boundary and Tolu areas, including a popular market in the area called Kasuwa, where anything can be sold without any law enforcement agent raising an eyebrow.

    “I was charged to court for being in possession of Indian hemp and was later sent to Kirikiri prison where I stayed for four months. I was freed on May 20, 2013.

    “I learnt sewing while I was in prison, but let me tell you the naked truth: there was nothing to learn in prison. Rather the prison hardens the inmates because of the hard life there. I was only lucky to have been selected as one of the cooks that prepared food for the inmates.

    “I would have continued as a food vendor when I came out of prison, but I had no money. We used to cook half-done beans which we ate with gari. We also ate eba with ordinary soup. No meat. Only church people used to bring good food on Sundays. People who have rich relations also get good food because they get money from their people with which they bought food outside.

    “Prison soup has no meat. It is only on Fridays that they put fish.

    “When I returned from prison, I started selling ogogoro. I stopped selling Indian hemp because it was what sent me to prison. I was arrested this time because of my boyfriend, Ugochukwu.

    “When the police came, they asked me about my boyfriend, Ugochukwu, and I told them that he was not around. They became annoyed and asked me to follow them to the police station. I did not know anything about how they collected money from somebody.

    The second suspect, Jackson, said: “I finished JSS 3 in Ojora Memorial Senior Secondary School, Boundary, Ajegunle. My result was seized, but I took GCE (General Certificate of Education) and cleared six papers at credit level.

    “I later went to work at Papillion Industries, a company that makes plastic buckets. We were paid on a daily basis and I was paid N450 daily. At times, I would go home with N550 or N600, depending on how much work I did.

    “I later left the company and went to Tin Can Island in Apapa area of Lagos to look for another job. It was my late friend, Wale, who took me there. There we were doing clearing and I was there for eight months. It was whenever Wale got a clearing job that I got some money.

    “My problem started when he went to Igbokoda in Ondo State and none of his clients or boys wanted to give me a job. After five months, I became frustrated and started thinking of what to do.

    “I met one customs officer and started working with him. I used to help him to check what was inside containers and he used to give me transport money every day. I also used to make some small money to help myself.

    “One day, I met Ugochukwu through a friend named Michael and told him my frustration and plan to look for another job. I even told him to look for work for me. Ugochukwu told me that he could not find work for me. He advised me to purchase a form for recruitment into the army, saying that government wanted to recruit more people.

    “I took my mother to his house and she thanked him for that advice. I have six credits while Ugochukwu told me that the army only required three credits to qualify for recruitment. I went to Union Bank and bought a form. I also travelled to Calabar and Ikeja for Army and Air Force examinations and interviews.

    “My name came out in the army and we were asked to go for medical screening, but I had no money. I begged Ugochukwu to help me with some money but he refused.

    “Another form came out in April. Before I bought the form, I went to our pastor to pray for me. The examination we wanted to take was to come up on July 4. There was a space to be filled by a divisional police officer of my area.

    “I told Juliet about it and she said I should not worry because her boyfriend, Ugochukwu, knows many DPOs, including the one at Ajeromi. She assured me that with Ugochukwu’s intervention, the DPO would sign my form because he was Ugochukwu’s cousin.

    “I am not a soldier or air force personnel. Ugochukwu slapped Don, Gabriel’s cousin and police informant, and Don’s mother was begging me to help him but I could not do anything. She was begging me to rescue her son as Ugochukwu was slapping him.

    “I am not even interested in joining the force again. I want to go to the university to study Electrical Engineering. I want to buy JAMB form.”

  • De Raufs DG raises alarm over threat to life

    De Raufs DG raises alarm over threat to life

    The Director General of De Raufs, Comrade Amotolu Shittu, has raised an alarm of plan by unidentified men to assassinate him.

    Through his group, De Raufs, Shittu is mobilising support for the re-election of Governor Rauf Aregbesola in the August 9 guber poll.

    At a press conference in Osogbo, Osun State, on Sunday, he disclosed that strange men had been monitoring his movement in the last three weeks.

    He alleged that unidentified group of men three days ago came to his house very late at night and started banging his gate, attempting to force it open.

    He said the development had made him relocate his family while he he too had abandoned the house for fear of being attacked.

    According to him: “I have lately received many strange threat messages and calls. And not long ago, some men attacked the Director of Mobilisation of our group in a broad day light in front of our office. I don’t think what I have done by supporting Aregbesola should bother anybody.

    “It is my choice to support the governor I believe is doing well and mean well for the people. As a human right activist, my concern is about the people and if any government is promoting their interest. I have monitored the policies and programmes of Aregbesola and I have seen that they are people-oriented.”

    Shittu said he decided not to report the threats against him to the security agents because he had lost confidence in the security agencies with the recent deployment of operatives of the Department of State Security (DSS) to the state.

    Condemning wearing of masks by these security operatives in the state , he warned President Goodluck Jonathan not to militarize the state.

    “Any attempt by the PDP and Jonathan to take over Osun state by force may consume them.? I don’t know the ratipnae or justification of the Federal Government to invade a peaceful state with masked security men, whom, we suspect are thugs. Their operation could be likened to that of miscreants or hoodlums. Whatever evil the perpetrate no one would be able to identified them since they are using hoods in an unregistered vehicles.

    “They are killers, they are not in the state to secure lives and property. We are crying out loud now to the whole world to see them as agents of destruction.”

  • Taking risks to enhance life, justice and human dignity; taking risks that waste human potential, create suffering and perpetuate insecurity

    Taking risks to enhance life, justice and human dignity; taking risks that waste human potential, create suffering and perpetuate insecurity

    [Being an expanded version of remarks at a banquet for Wole Soyinka, Government House, Port Harcourt, July 30, 2014]

    As we gather here tonight in celebration of Wole Soyinka’s 80th birthday, his first major play written when he was in his mid-twenties, A Dance of the Forests, is being rehearsed for performance in Tel Aviv in a Hebrew translation. About two weeks ago, the U.S.-based Nigerian theatre director who is in charge of the production, Segun Ojewuyi, sent an email to Soyinka and myself in which he gave a gripping account of life in Tel Aviv at the present moment and equally important, how this very early play of Soyinka had found a new and unbelievable relevance to the unfolding human tragedy in the struggle between the Palestinians in the Gaza strip and the state of Israel. A Dance of the Forests is a complex play whose theme or “message” cannot be rendered in one sentence, one paragraph even. But it is safe to say that at the heart of the drama of the play is a visionary projection of the tragedies and the suffering that a people – any people in the world – can expect that choose to ignore the lessons of their history. Soyinka wrote and staged this play over half a century ago and now in Gaza and Tel Aviv, in the West Bank and Jerusalem, it turns out that the play might have much to teach the Jewish and Palestinian peoples as they grapple with the disregarded lessons of their history. It is likely, tragically very likely, that another fifty years from now, in another part of the world, this same play will be performed under similar circumstances. Ladies and gentlemen, fellow Nigerians, that is the quality of the artistic vision in many of the works of the man whose 80th birthday anniversary we are marking at this state banquet tonight.

    As excited as I am that A Dance of the Forests has found a new if poignant relevance in Tel Aviv and Gaza, that is not the primary reason why I use this fact to highlight the power of Soyinka’s artistic vision in this tribute. On the contrary, I cite the play and its current production experience in the Middle East for a completely different reason. Let me state this simply: almost more than any other literary work of Soyinka, A Dance of the Forests marks perhaps the most outstanding thing about WS as a dramatist, thinker and activist and this is the fact that he has a propensity for taking great risks, artistic and political. All his greatest works in drama, poetry and fictional prose are nothing if not works of considerable experimentation with form, ideas and modes of expression.

    With regard to political activism, we know that he was charged, tried and acquitted for the radio incident of 1965 and so we cannot try him all over again, but we know he was the gunman! Compared to other risks he has since taken, that was indeed, only the beginning and rather small compared with other risks he went on to take. Anyone who has read the last three out of his five books of memoires, The Man Died; Ibadan, the ‘Penklemes’ Years; and You Must Set Forth at Dawn, knows what I am talking about here. Indeed, if Soyinka is one of the greatest avant-garde writers of African and world literature in the second half of the 20th century, this is largely because of the artistic risks he was always willing to take. Similarly, the risks he took as one of our continent’s great political activists and human rights campaigners have been nothing short of legendary.

    But if WS was always naturally predisposed to taking artistic risks and making political gambles, the most important thing to note is that he took risks and made gambles for justice, equality of opportunity for all, and human dignity. This is the heart of my short tribute tonight. And so let me repeat it: the great artistic and political risks that Soyinka has taken in his 80 years have been in the cause of and for the advancement of justice, equality and human dignity. I say this, indeed I emphasize it deliberately and strongly, because human beings and communities take risks all the time. As a species, we are fundamentally predisposed to take risks all the time, small risks and huge risks. However, unfortunately, most of the risks that we take as individuals, groups and collectively as the human species are taken in the pursuit of selfish or petty interests that place us above others, siblings, relatives, friends, and co-workers.

    More grandiosely, within the nations of the world, the rich and the powerful take risks in order to secure and consolidate their domination or even enslavement of their fellow men and women. In all these myriad cases of taking risks to secure unfair and immoral advantage or power over others that is a big part of human individual and collective life, the risks always come back to haunt the risk-takers. That is the big irony between taking risks for human progress and taking risks to perpetuate human suffering. Very few countries in the world show ample and graphic illustration of this point as does Nigeria.

    It is not usual in the analysis of the terrible crises that bedevil our country at the present time to see these crises as the products of taking risks, not for justice, equality and human dignity but for entrenching suffering, insecurity and injustice. But we must start to see and fight these evils as the products of risk-taking of the most alarming and calamitous kind. Trillions of naira are looted with total impunity – what is that if not taking the risk of generating suffering for the generality of Nigerians? Billions of petrodollars are squandered – what is that if not taking the risk of a dire and bleak future for our youths and those yet unborn? In place of rational, enlightened and civilised discourse, what we get from both the official and unofficial megaphones of the powers that be is the tendency to rationalize and explain away the retrograde policies and actions of our rulers – what is that if not taking the risk of creating and maintaining bitter, self-destructive divisions between the ethnic and regional communities that make up this country?

    Nobody is safe, nobody is protected from the suffering, injustice and insecurity that such negative and foolish risk taking creates, not even the wealthy and the powerful themselves. The Boko Haram insurgency is perhaps the ultimate proof of this. But there are legions of other “proofs” confronting us in this country. Don’t we all, rich and poor, face the same hazards of roads that are death-traps? Don’t we all face the shame and disgrace before the international community and the world caused by what foreign visitors in our midst see of the quality of life for the vast majority of the people in our country? Who is protected from the belief that Nigeria is one of the most corrupt and unregenerate countries in the world in spite of its oil wealth, indeed because of its oil wealth?

    And yet this country has not been without women and men willing to take risks to make things better for their communities and all of us. In this very state where this banquet is being held tonight we have the supreme examples of Isaac Adaka Boro and Ken Saro Wiwa. In the colonial era, many radical politicians, labour leaders and intellectuals took risks to win our freedom from foreign rule. This tradition is even truer of the postindependence period. Gani Fawehinmi went to jail innumerable times in defense of the rights of the masses of ordinary Nigerians to a decent life and a secure future. I have mentioned the examples of Isaac Boro and Saro Wiwa. Bala Mohammed gave his life in the fight against the forces of reaction and misrule in our country, especially in the North. To the end, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti was unrelenting in his war against military autocracy and its civilian collaborators.

    This profile is consistent with what obtains in other parts of the world and throughout human social and political history. I state this fact in order to underscore the need not to isolate the extraordinary case of WS, the need not to idolize him. He is part of a great tradition in our country and our world. At the heart of his turbulent life and career is the fact that he has always taken risks, as an artist, thinker and activist, for justice, equality and human dignity. He has been extraordinarily lucky to have survived the dire possibilities of many of those risks, so much so that one colleague, Professor Itse Sagay, has said that death is afraid of him. Well, I hope so. And I hope that 10 years from now, death will still be afraid of him and when we gather to celebrate his 90th birthday, the risks that WS has taken in his life and career for human progress and human dignity will be far more evident in the lives of most Nigerians, Africans and human beings all over the world than the risks that our rulers continue to make in the perpetuation of suffering, injustice and insecurity.

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    Port Harcourt, July 30, 2014

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • ‘At 80, I’m just starting life’

    ‘At 80, I’m just starting life’

    Chief Mrs. Bisi Ogunleye is the founder of the Country Women Association (COWAN). The organisation which started about 32 years ago began by empowering 225 women with micro credit facilities to boost their businesses. Today, over 320,000 women are beneficiaries of the project she is passionate about. At a point, Ogunleye was invited by the Central Bank to share her success story and management tips with directors of would-be micro finance banks in the country. In this interview, she speaks with Yetunde Oladeinde about her economic empowerment package, living a healthy lifestyle and how she turned an unemployment challenge to a great opportunity in the United States.

    WHAT is the secret of your good health? It is because I live as a Nigerian, eat Nigerian traditional foods and take to the laws of good health which my mother gave me.

    Can you share some of these laws with us?

    First, is to eat good vegetables. Scientists are saying it today, practically they taught us to have vegetables around us and traditionally we had lots of fruits around us. We don’t eat in the olden days in our farms without one fruit or the other beside us. At that time, we thought we were poor and that was why we were not eating bread like the others.

    We were eating plantain which was good food but we did not appreciate it then. Now, I am doing exactly what she told me then. My mother died at the age of 115 years. If she lived on all those vegetables and was able to live long, why should I die at 80 or thereabout, eating fake fast foods? I am still young.

    How old are you now?

    That, I do not know precisely. I should be about 80 years. The Bible says that someone who is 100 years among them is a young person. My father did not die young; he died at the age of 110 years. Therefore, if they did not die young, then I am just starting my own life.

    Talking about just starting your life now, what is a typical day like now?

    It is one of the things that I inherited from my mother. She was very active and hardworking. I like cooking, writing, reading, talking and chatting with people. I like meeting people, helping them rediscover themselves and I still do that. But I never ask people to do what I don’t do.

    What are the things that you write about?

    I like to bring out the beauty in some of the things we do, that the modern technology or the western contact is making us lose. The value of saving; it is part of our culture. Our mothers would never go to bed without leaving extra food in the house, because of the strangers that can come any time.

    They liked saving money to help one another and it was called esusu or ajo. These are the small, small money that is called inclusion into the big money, which they are talking about. The esusu and ajo that people put together in the market at the family level or church level. If you add this together, you find that it is a lot of money but they do not value it. I remember when we went for a micro credit campaign in Washington in the year 1992.

    There, I spoke on a topic called esusu but the Nigerians who were there got annoyed. They said that I went to disgrace Nigerians at the event talking about pennies and all that. They argued that that was not what we should be talking about at that point. Interestingly, one of them is a senator and I am trying to make him come up with a law on esusu and ajo as one of the things that have been our natural way of life. So I write on some of these things and how you can turn that to wealth.

    How do you feel helping to turn around the lives of so many women in different parts of the country?

    They turned their own lives around. Have I turned around my own life, not to talk of turning somebody else’s life around? What I did is like a torch. You are the one holding the torch but the torch would show you the way and change your life. What actually turned their lives around was when this woman woke up to value their lives. Even though they did not appreciate what they were doing with themselves. At that point, they thought that once you go to school, you are their lord and they are nothing. When you go to their villages, they would say that mama would give you plantain, mama would give you oil, mama would give you yam, but what do you give mama? However, I believe they have a lot that they do; the love they have for their family, children, fellow women and the other sacrifices they make are all very important. Unfortunately, they did not put value on it. These are the things that I made them realise and that they are the backbone of the country. Immediately they grabbed this, things changed and they began to do a lot of things that inspired others. They also taught me a lot about leaves, herbs, the healthy lifestyle, and the things God said we should eat and be well. leaves, herbs, the healthy lifestyle, and the things God said we should eat and be well.

    All I did was to first of all help to package it and after packaging I helped them to market it. After this, I helped to create a negotiating table for them.

    COWAN was very popular during Maryam Babangida’s Better Life era. What role did the first lady play at that point?

    Better Life I would not say came out of COWAN. May her soul rest in peace. She told many people that when she saw what COWAN was doing, she thought somebody must take it up at the policy level. Better Life was to wake up the policy makers and government in particular; to see to the special role the rural women were playing in the development of this country.  Better Life and COWAN cannot die; it is not a name but an action. COWAN would die only when there is no rural woman.

    Are you saying that the structure in place would survive long after you are gone?

    Why not? I am not COWAN, I am only an instrument and I am empowering them to empower other women. It is just like Elijah in the Bible who told Elisha: ‘see me when I am going, and then grab me and I am happy.’

    You come from a family of people who are strong and outstanding in their fields; what does this mean to you?

    I always tell my brothers and sisters that God has been very faithful to our parents. I think there must be something between this God and our parents. Whatever we have become today is not because we are good but like when God told Abraham that as long as your children do not forget me, this covenant would I keep.

    We learnt a lot of hard work from our parents. My father was a policeman but I did not grow up to know him as a policeman. He was then a farmer and my four mothers worked with him. He was a polygamist. One of the things that were a bit different in our family was that even though it was a polygamous home, we did not see ourselves as coming from a polygamous home.  I remember that in those days, we had only one mother and the rest were known as aunties or sisters. The one in charge was the senior wife; the treasurer was the senior wife, she was the one who could stand up to the husband and defend the other wives. So, there was cooperation and love. Some of my siblings include Bishop Olukolade and Major General Olukolade. There are so many pastors, deacons and deaconesses in the family. I am the Iya Ijo of Holy Trinity Church, Ido-Ani Diocese. were known as aunties or sisters. The one in charge was the senior wife; the treasurer was the senior wife, she was the one who could stand up to the husband and defend the other wives. So, there was cooperation and love. Some of my siblings include Bishop Olukolade and Major General Olukolade. There are so many pastors, deacons and deaconesses in the family. I am the Iya Ijo of Holy Trinity Church, Ido-Ani Diocese.

    If you had to advise women, what would you tell them?

    I would tell them to value themselves. If you do not see yourself as anything, nobody would value you. Make sure you continue to do what is good. Then it is also important to train your children properly. It is sad that some mothers do not train their children at all and they allow them to be bigger than them. Just before my mother died, I was to go for a COWAN meeting at Kogi State in 2003 and as I was getting too late, she shouted at me, saying that ‘your father would never be late for an event. Get out of that place and go to your Kogi or no Kogi.’ At that stage, she was after me doing the right thing. Whatever they become tomorrow, it is you. Those young ones are doing wrong things these days and you find them doing things that they should not be doing. I pity the situation that they are in. When you are idle, the devil would give you another job. Instead of them thinking of this, they should look at their background and see what they can do. Many people are saying that it is because they have no job, but how many people employed Dangote, how many people employed Bill Gate? You should think of creating something. When I got to America, I had no job. They refused to employ me as a teacher who had worked in Nigeria for about 25 years. So I started weaving aso-oke shawls and that opened a number of doors for me. Now, they call me and specially invite me to become a lecturer at the Carnegie Melon University for African Studies. So, you see that you can create a job for yourself. Instead of our youths being on the wrong side, let them try to be on the right side.

  • In this place full of all known oddities, life is brutish and short

    The question still remains why? Will somebody please tell us why these things are happening?

    These terrestrial plains are full of oddities enough. Take the countries of the world. Don’t we have countries so rich and contented they are even planning right now to create cities on extraterrestrial plains where some of their citizens may retire to periodically when their souls feel like taking a break? On the other hand, don’t we have countries so poor it is all they can do to even keep their governments running and their citizens fed on one square meal a day? Then, don’t we have countries so advanced in scientific discoveries they have practically invented everything including machines that work, think, eat, fight, and breathe for humans? In such societies, machines keep the roads orderly, maintain the transport, water, electricity, and all other systems, and generally keep a tab on public utilities. But then, we also have countries that are so steeped in ignorance and superstition that they still make human sacrifices. Just one more comparison before we leave this paragraph. Don’t we have countries so developed they know and protect every member of the society irrespective of race, party, colour or creed? And then don’t we have other countries so undeveloped they are practically at the point of asking you if you are of a certain religion or creed before selling you a box of matches? Well, don’t we?

    Now, let’s come to the oddities in our own Nigeria. One of the great oddities, among many others, that I am never tired of pointing out in Nigeria, is the religious hypocrisy that is so endemic and pandemic to us. All religions in Nigeria appear to recognize the cardinal rule that loving God and loving one’s neighbour summarise God’s laws, making them the two rules that matter most. Yet, here, in this land, we have enough religious oddities. One, we have our religious zealots who hold such noisy night vigils all night long, with drums and other music apparatuses blaring so much noises out of loud speakers placed outside the worship place so that the neighbours cannot sleep. The only thing those ones can do is mutter imprecations against all men of God into their pillows all night. Two, we have other religious zealots who blare their early morning call to prayers right into the ear drums of neighbours accompanied by loud music and sermons, depending on their pick. They never mind such little things as neighbours who may be sick and need some quiet, have been on night duty and need morning sleep, have babies that have been up all night, or have gone partying and have come home to sleep. Yep, we are all entitled to our oddities, but the point is that our religions are so busy loving we their neighbours that they keep us awake all night, muttering imprecations into our pillows.

    One oddity that is still difficult to understand though is the predilection for settling scores with bombs, particularly in the north. It is no longer any news that over this last week, bombs went off in Kaduna in such mad successions that had all our collective vertebrae baffled and reeling around in intemperate shock. No one is sure of the death toll but figures are said to be around a hundred, give or take. Naturally, as with all such bombings, the victims are all innocent of all the grievances that prompted and motivated such a grandiose and disproportionate destruction.

    What I find incomprehensible though is that when these bombings occur, everyone is shocked and we all scamper around trying to find reasons or some kind of solace in conjectures. Then, the country moves on, with nothing coming out of police investigations. Granted, there are those among us so intelligent that they can read the political terrain and tell what it all means despite what we see, or even foretell what may come next. There are however many like me who are of a more simple turn of mind who like to be told first the kind of leaves at the bottom of the tea cup before being given the interpretation of those leaves and why they are at the bottom of my teacup in the first place and not someone else’s. No one, so far, has been able to explain to us why we are daily losing hundreds of citizens to bombs indiscriminately discarded by aggrieved individuals. It is an egregious violation of our intelligence indeed that we are being slaughtered for a reason we don’t know. So, the question still remains why? Will somebody please tell us why these things are happening?

    Perhaps, I tell myself, some people are so angry with the government that they have resorted to bombing the government’s citizens, you know, as they do in football. If you cannot get the team, get the players by breaking their legs or something. Truth is, I don’t know any Nigerian now who is not angry with this government, but if we all went around bombing each other, where would we all be? The government is not paying me enough, gboam! The government is not giving enough electricity to the people, gboam! The government is not pumping water into my house, gboam! Now tell me, just how many gboams do you think we will need to make it hear us? One good example, just look at the way the government is handling the crisis in the health sector. I tell you, it deserves many gboams for that. Rather than tell people the truth and let everyone go home and build the country by doing the work they are paid for, the government decided to create a crisis for political reasons where none need have existed. Now, there is a crisis, and there is an impasse and everyone is watching how it will get itself out of that unsavory jam.

    Perhaps again, I tell myself, these bombers are truly being used and sponsored by faceless politicians to make faceless political points that have not been clearly enunciated. If that is so, all I can say is shame, thrice shame on them for using defenseless and innocent citizens to make such useless points! One, I assume these politicians are men; two, I assume they are old enough to fight their own fights. So, I believe it is not only cowardly, it is unmanly of them to fight through boys hardly out of their nappies to be able to fully appreciate the values of left and right thinking, and worse to use innocent people as fodders in their cannons. It is just so cowardly. Cowards!!!

    In all of this, we are all losing. Just imagine the sheer number of those who have been sent to the beyond since this crisis began, and multiply by three to include those who have been rendered economically incapable, then imagine the vast area of land that can no longer be farmed because of this problem, then imagine those who have become refugees outside their homes on this account, then you begin to appreciate the problem a bit. Right now, the loss in economic terms is huge. Yet, it does not include the great depletion of future human resources this problem is occasioning. We cannot now begin to calculate the incalculable harm this thing is doing to our future. When the time comes, let us pray that we do not pack our hands on top of our heads.

    Let the sponsors and users of this group of arsonists and bombers be made known so that we can dismember them, verbally. It is important that they should come out of hiding and face the nation to tell us why so many people’s lives have been made brutish and short through being killed, maimed, displaced, or psychologically tormented. As fellow Nigerians, we deserve an answer.

  • ‘My life in danger’

    ‘My life in danger’

    A Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain in Oyo State, Alhaji Adebisi Olopoenia, has said his life is in danger over the attempted murder on former Chairman of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) Mukaila Lamidi (Auxiliary).

    Olopoenia spoke yesterday with reporters in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital. He said: “I received information this morning that some politicians in this state have submitted my name and 11 other PDP chieftains’ state to some security operatives  naming me to be involved with the Auxiliary murder case. Am I a union member or a politician and a businessman? I have received various threat messages on my phone that some people the party want to kill me and I have informed the police about this development last month. My life is not safe any longer. That was the same way the former NURTW boss, Alhaji Lateef Salako (Elewe Omo), was assassinated too.”

    “I believe this accusation is coming from a PDP governorship aspirant who doesn’t want me to support someone whom I believe so much in to transform this state in 2015.”