Tag: Masaba

  • The merry widows of Masaba

    You must remember Malam Abubakar Bello Masaba who passed recently. May Allah grant him eternal repose. While he was alive, snooper followed the saga of the multi-spouse and multi-purpose man of  Bida emirate with a mixture of amusement and apprehension. Snooper could not understand what all the fuss about this redoubtable man of means and member was all about, particularly since in this age of mass unemployment the man was providing gainful employment for eighty six women, and all of the women appeared to be in fine fettle judging from the pictures.

    Snooper was  bit rusty about his native laws and their authority. First, the intrepid malam was ordered to divorce all but four of his spouses in strict compliance with Islamic tenets. When this did not appear to be working, our man was issued with a swift deportation order. And when he appeared tardy and tacky about leaving town, the law came for him in its full weight.

    This was where the story began to read like some magical stuff out of the Arabian night entertainment of yore. Hell hath no fury than aroused spouses.  Driven to vengeful fury by the plight of their husband, the Masaba wives staged a public demonstration protesting the persecution of their main man. It was a colourful carnival, a rainbow coalition of carnality. Snooper knows a beautiful woman when he sees one, and many of these women, even if age has roughed them up a little bit, could have stepped out of a beauty pageant in their early days.

    Their precise states of origin and the origin of their states have already sparked off an internet firefight between a Benin princeling and a Hausa noble man of the extinct Habe dynasty.  Among Masaba’s prize collection are Buroro beauties, Edo damsels, Oburo queens from ancient Oyo, Ibo wenches, Efik brunettes and imported eves from the old slave coast. Some of them even look like delectable quadroons from the old slave plantation in North Carolina.

    Snooper has been doing some elementary calculations. If Malam Masaba were to fulfil his conjugal obligations to his bevy of beauties, it would mean calling at least three of them to the matrimonial mattress everyday with Friday set aside for prayers and purification. Even by the standard set by Fela Anikulapo, that would be a prodigious feat of physical exertion headed for the Guinness Book of World Record. So rather than persecuting the old man, we ought to have sent him to the Olympics to augment our miserable haul of medals? Enter him for a new category of Bedminton and at over eighty years the man would have set a world record even before entering the field or the bed.

    It was with much hilarity and expectation that snooper took the puzzle and the picture to Baba Lekki,  the old rebel and philosopher of racial integration, at his temporary headquarters in Ogba where he claimed to be monitoring some urgent political developments. Upon seeing me and the picture, the old man burst into a prolonged smile of deranged excitement. He already knew what was happening.

    “So tell me, that means say Alhaji Masaba don become Alhaji Mësaaba, abi no be so?” he queried with much mirth and merriment.

    “Bros, what is that?  Why are you adding your own confusion to an already confused situation?” I asked him in mock anger.

    “Listen, don’t be a fool. For Yoruba language, when a hen wan hatch him egg dem say he dey saba, abi no be so? So when dem ask man make he no hatch him egg again no be mësaba bi dat one? Abi which kind yeye fool be this one?” the man growled, feigning annoyance. Snooper burst into a loud laugh, marvelling at the linguistic ingenuity of the old crook.

    “It is a pity dem no dey talk about polyandry abi na only polygamy dem sabi?” the old crank pursued with a severe frown.

    “Bros, what is that one again?” snooper asked.

    “Polygamy is when a man is married to many wives. Polyandry is when a woman is married to many husbands. One rich Yoruba woman for gutter in Idumota come get six husbands. One na him driver, another na him clerk, the third one dey wash him clothes, the fourth one na him mai-guard, the fifth one na him messenger and the six na him vulcaniser who dey pump tyre for midnight. Shikena, case don finish”, the old man noted tersely and dismissed snooper.

  • Secrets Masaba took away

    Secrets Masaba took away

    CUSTOMARILY, love is thought to be two hearts beating as one. What then defined the enigma of Abubakar Bello Masaba was an uncanny skill to stir and replicate such heartbeat in multiple dozens of liaison, sustaining the magic till he drew his last breath last Saturday at a time the society had otherwise come under what could be termed an epidemic of divorce.

    As the remains of the nonagenarian were finally lowered into mother earth hours later in his native Bida after a clearly remarkable career in uncommon polygamy, what has unwittingly been unveiled is a record unparalleled in Nigeria’s recorded history, the surpassing of which would be Herculean indeed for future challengers.

    His brood consists of no fewer than 187 children. His fabled harem of over 100 wives is located in a nondescript, colonial-style two-storied building in Bida. Literally, he owned the lock, stock and barrel. In one of his rare interviews, he revealed his recruitment strategy on BBC in 2008:

    “I don’t go looking for them, they come to me… I’ll consider the fact that God has asked me to do it and I’ll just marry them.” Doubtless, countless lotharios exist within Nigerian borders whose clandestine exploits over the years, when aggregated, would make Masaba’s look like a child’s play.

    But not many had his honesty to openly declare their interests, nor the courage to assemble their conquests into a single community with an identifiable address. The closest anyone had come would be in faraway Saudi Arabia.

    A wealthy business tycoon, Saleh Al-Sayeri, is reputed to have formed the habit of keeping dozens of wives, even though he hardly remembers the names of most of them. But officially, he acknowledges four, to obey Islamic injunction which imposes a ceiling of 4.

    Even at that, Al-Sayeri still relies on an ingenious mathematical formula of elimination by substitution. In the past two decades, he says he has kept three as constant but shuffles the fourth candidate yearly. His cheeky explanation: “It’s the one for renewal… I like to change my fourth wife every year.

    ” But, not Masaba. For as long as anyone could remember, the maverick Islamic teacher and traditional healer had cultivated and nurtured a mammoth harem. At the last count, the population was put at at least 100.

    His legend grew not so much from his stamina to sustain a seemingly boundless matrimony, but obviously more from the equanimity and fortitude he showed in the face of tribulation and persecution suffered for his marital preference.

    A vivid example was the run-in he had with the Niger Sharia Council in 2008, eventuating in his imprisonment for the sake of love. At different times, influential institutions like Jama’atu Nasiru-Islam (JNI), the Bida Emirate Council and Islamic leaders had enjoined him to either dissolve his harem then put at 86 or winnow the number to 4.

    Masaba bluntly refused. He opted to go to jail instead. Typically, assorted apocryphal tales were soon spread by enemies to discredit him. One said he usually charmed vulnerable women seeking healing with juju before putting them in family way.

    So, it would then seem his teaching and healing were not just touching hearts; they touched lips as well. But in a rare show of conjugal solidarity in shared adversity, 57 of such women later staged a parade and solemnly declared that they married him on free will and could not be happier in their marriage.

    They attested he was not just a good husband, but also a fantastic father. With that, the authorities no longer had a strong excuse to keep in him in custody. On return from jail, Masaba never failed to continue exhibiting his accustomed grace under choking pressure from the immediate community, defiantly announcing instead a resolution to keep expanding his harem, only warning traducers who persisted were courting God’s wrath. His words:

    “I’ll keep marrying them as long as I’m alive. Whoever is fighting me because of my wives or love life, such an individual has missed it. Left for me, I would have married maybe two wives, but I’ll keep marrying till the end of time. I just want to advise those fighting against the number of wives to stop because such people are waging war against God, their creator.

    ” Ordinarily, a household of hundred wives and over hundred children of voting age should constitute a formidable bloc – or what more Americans are learning to rever as “electoral college” – to, at least, swing electoral victory in the locality, if not bargain for political concessions at higher level.

    But despite his ordeal at the hands of both secular and spiritual authorities at some point, Masaba was never known to have openly flirted with any political party out of vendetta or in search of protection. Since the trustees of the faith he professed seemed unwilling to reconcile with him till the end, it may entirely not be too outlandish therefore to view Masaba’s marital doctrine more as a cultural statement in the African milieu.

    His preference would easily have lent itself to two disparate interpretations: either positively as an expression of the values of sharing and accommodation indigenous to Africa or negatively as the vulgar way a man could display his material abundance. In traditional society, a man’s affluence used to be measured by the size of his harem.

    At 93, the super polygamist of Bida could not be said to have died prematurely in a country where life expectancy is a miserable 47. Regardless, the pain his passing brings is the nuggets of lessons not shared, both macro and micro, corporate and individual. Despite his extra-ordinary accomplishments and the long years he lived, he was not known to have gathered or documented his experiences to benefit researchers or the posterity for that matter.

    For instance, we would never know the management principles Masaba adopted to run his extra-large household. It surely required wizardry in financial matters to sustain such multitude under a roof. Each time economic recession beckoned over the years, what fiscal policy did he resort to to ensure no wife stayed hungry or kids’ school fees unpaid?

    Had he written a book, such would definitely have been strongly recommended to political leaders of contemporary Nigeria to borrow one or two leaves not only in the husbandry of material resources, but also in the management of human diversities. Masaba selected his women from many ethnic nationalities. He might have had a few runs-in with authorities; but we never heard police regularly visited his home to settle quarrels or fights. With that, he and his clan undoubtedly provided a model in peaceful co-existence.

    Today’s leaders who revel in fanning the embers of division – whether sectarian or political – would also need to learn from him the virtues of tolerance and inclusiveness. On the other hand, even if only out of curiosity, I imagine young men of nowadays would have sought Masaba’s clarification or guidance at a time when not only the marriage institution is increasingly undermined by upsurge in divorce, men’s virility is also being redefined by an explosion of indulgence in performance-enhancing substance hawked at the street-corner.

    In a veiled reference to virility, he told another interviewer: “A man with 10 wives would collapse and die, but my own power is given by Allah… That is why I have been able to control 86 of them.” With such breath-taking outlay, some might want to further ascertain, even if only for academic purposes, whether the great Masaba still had any appetite left to look outside.

    If Masaba then relied solely on God’s power to service his harem, many would have wanted to find out whether he kept a roster. If there was, was it cast in stone or subject to revision periodically? In the first place, was it imposed by fiat or benefitted from vigorous debate by every member of the harem before being ratified in the fine tradition of democracy?

    And most symbolic of all, the old soldier of intimacy chose to take a bow on the eve of February, the acclaimed season of love, whether Agape or carnal.

  • Masaba buried in Niger

    First son of the late Mohammed Bello Masaba, Mahamood, has said only God knows who will succeed his father as spiritual leader.

    Mahamood spoke to News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Bida shortly after the burial of his father.

    “We are patiently waiting for God to choose our spiritual leader. For now, we are focusing on special prayers for the soul of the deceased before thinking of his successor.

    “I don’t think I will succeed him but if it’s God’s will, I am ready to take over and continue from where he stopped”, Mahamood  said.

    Personal Assistant to the late Masaba, Mohammed Tahir, said: “We are in mourning; we are not concerned about who will succeed baba for now.

    “Our attention is more on offering prayers for our late leader. We thank everyone for coming to sympathise with us and by God’s grace, when the decision is taken, we will keep you informed.”

  • Super polygamist, Masaba, dies at 93

    Bida-based popular super polygamist, Alhaji Mohammed Bello, is dead.

    He died around 2pm yesterday after he reportedly slumped twice on Friday.

    His health, it was learnt, deteriorated after the fall with apprehension high among his followers when he failed to failed to attend the Saturday’s morning Islamic teaching, which attracts participants from within and outside Niger State.

    Personal assistant to the controversial Islamic cleric, Alhaji Mutairu Bello, confirmed his death.

    In a telephone interview with our correspondent yesterday, he said:  “With gratitude to Allah (SWT) we announce the death of Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar Bello this afternoon. He was aged 93 years. He died after a brief illness.”

    Bello, who was sobbing said: “The Janiza prayer and interment is slated for tomorrow (Sunday) by 10am.”

    The personal aide said the late Islamic preacher had foretold his death and was prepared for it.

    “Baba had told us that his time was up. He told me personally during his last moment that he has completed his divine assignment and was ready to meet his creator.

    “He told us to remain dedicated to the cause of Islam and urged us all not to deviate from all his teachings on righteousness, piety and total submission to the will of Allah.

    “He warned us to shun adultery but that we should marry our women because it is ‘Hallal’ before Allah.”

    Many members of his sect wore gloomy looks at the Masaba enclave when the news broke.

  • I’m alive, says Masaba 

    Ninety-two-year-old Bida super-polygamist and Islamic cleric Alhaji Muhammad Bello Masaba is alive, contrary to rumours that he was dead.

    The social media was awash last Saturday with news of the death of the controversial cleric in his Masaba quarters of Bida, Niger State.

    In a telephone interview, the octogenarian said the rumour was untrue. He attributed the rumour to “enemies of Allah and the divine assignment given to him”.

    “I am alive; I am not dead. Allah’s divine assignment must be carried out. Though death is the ultimate end of all, for me, I will fulfil my days and divine assignment.

    “I have heard the wicked rumour being peddled, but Allah is greater than all the perpetrators of this wicked rumour. Please, I am inviting you to Bida. I am now with my children and well wishers. My health is in perfect condition and I have been attending to people since the wicked rumour went viral”, Masaba said.

    Masaba has been in contention with Islamic scholars and the traditional institution for marrying 89 wives as against the maximum four prescribed for Muslim faithful.