Tag: princess

  • BBNaija Princess reveals how restaurant staff stole her Range Rover

    BBNaija Princess reveals how restaurant staff stole her Range Rover

    Former Big Brother Naija housemate, Princess Onyejekwe, has shared a distressing experience on her Instagram page involving a restaurant in Abuja.

    According to Princess, her Range Rover was stolen by a staff member of a restaurant in Maitama, Abuja, as she detailed the incident that took place on November 28, 2023.

    Princess recounted being in a state of confusion as her car key and vehicle disappeared within less than 24 hours.

    The reality star explained that she visited the restaurant based on a friend’s recommendation to try Chinese cuisine, arriving at 7:10 p.m. after work.

    According to her, when she attempted to leave at 8:30 p.m., her car key was nowhere to be found.

    She said she later departed, planning to return the next day in hopes of finding her car key.

    Read Also: Phyna blasts Princess over abortion stance

    However, upon returning at 8:40 a.m. the following day, she discovered her car was missing from its parking spot.

    Despite informing the management before departing the previous evening, she expressed dissatisfaction with the treatment she received.

    Princess revealed that she located her car just as it was about to be vandalized and sold off in parts.

    She noted that following the apprehension of the culprits by authorities, she later identified them in a video.

  • Tee A thrills guests at the ‘Corporate Tyme Out’

    Music and comedy buffs had a blast at the sixth edition of Corporate Tyme Out with Tee A, which held on December 2nd at the Lagos Continental Hotel.

    There were hilarious comedy skits with Tee A, Princess, Frank Donga and MC Abbey that had everyone’s rib cracking.

    And Tee A, who has 20 years experience as a stand-up comedian, upped the ante with a diverse line-up of star performances; from the iconic disc jockey, DJ Jimmy Jatt to rap legend, Jude Abaga aka MI, gospel songstress, Tope Alabi, and alternative soul singer, Bez, the show did not miss any flavour of music.

    The crowd was elated to see GT the Guitarman perform, live, after his hiatus from the music scene.

    Not only were the artistes A-list, but ‘Corporate Tyme Out’ also had in attendance eminent personalities like the former first lady of Lagos State, Dame Abimbola Fashola, CEO, Smooth Promotions, Ayo Animashaun, Teju Baby Face and Osas Ighodaro amongst others.

  • BBNaija: The kisses and PDAs continue

    BBNaija: The kisses and PDAs continue

    Since the premiere of Big Brother Nigeria, last Sunday, drama has continued to flood TV screens with more intrigues in anticipation of what will happen next.

    On Tuesday, Nina was first to strike gold as she was caught on camera while sharing an intimate moment with Miracle in the shower early in the morning.

    In less than seven days, other housemates have joined in the fray.

    Only yesterday, Princess tried to kiss Rico but was bundled into a swerve as Rico politely resisted her advances.

    It should be recalled, however, that Bitto was recently summoned into the Diary room by big brother, after he touched Princess, and she wasn’t liking it.

    Forcing several viewers to argue whether Princess could be forcing herself on Rico.

    Read Also; BBNaija: Bitto Summonned for caressing Princess

     The Drama doesn’t end there. It hardens ever still, raising more eyebrows as the show slowly climaxes to peak.

    Still same Thursday night, Khloe was seen romancing Kbrule in bed.

    They came close to sharing a kiss, one that would have been successful had Khloe not resisted, fearing being spied on by the camera.

    Khloe on Wednesday expressed her desire for fellow housemate Lolu.

    Khloe has continued to trend as her nude pictures emerged online since Wednesday.

     

     

     

     

  • Princess Toyin Kolade gives mum befitting burial

    Princess Toyin Kolade gives mum befitting burial

    By Oladapo Sofowora

    Last Saturday will remain fresh in the minds of the indigenes of the ancient town of Ilesha, Osun State. It was the day society lady Princess Toyin Kolade came to town to bury her beloved mother in grand style.

    The mother of the boss of Fisolak Global Resources, Madam Comfort Folorunsho Adejuyigbe, had passed on in October, last year at the age of 92 and Princess Kolade had been planning a talk of the town burial for months. Her efforts came to glorious fruition on Friday April 28 and Saturday April 29 with a grand occasion that many people will not forget in a hurry.

    The Christian wake held on Friday was followed by the grand burial at Oke Ibukun Stadium in the town. Princess Kolade’s late mum was from the Biladu royal lineage and the Arimoro ruling house in Ijebuland. It was no surprise, therefore, that eminent royal personages, including the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi, and the Owa Obokun of Ilesha, Oba Gabriel Aromolaran, stormed the event to play the roles befitting of royal fathers.

    Alongside the many musicians that graced the event, prominent Nollywood acts like Bisi Ibidapo-Obe, Yinka Quadri, Taiwo Hassan and Fathia Balogun were on hand to honour her.

  • Beauty Emerald to be crowned Princess of Ngwa Land

    Beauty Emerald to be crowned Princess of Ngwa Land

    Delectable screen actress and Igbo cultural Ambassador, Lady Beauty Emerald, is set to be crowned as the Princess of Ngwa land. This is coming after her nomination and approval by the Paramount King of Ngwa Land in Abia State, His Eminence Eze Dr. Sir B.O. Enweremadu, the Ezeukwu of Ngwa Ukwu and his entire royal cabinet.

    The epochal event will take place on Friday, Nov 25 during the celebration of 40years on the throne of the first class monarch.

    Consequently, the National President of Ohaneze Ndigbo Nollywood (ONN) HRH Eze Harris Chuma will lead Nollywood practitioners of Igbo extraction, and  movie lovers to the historic event scheduled to take place in Ukpuala Ngwa Ancestrial field, Abia State.

    Also, on Sunday, November 27, Ohaneneze Ndigbo Nollywood will accord the Crown Princess a grand reception at Hotel de la Paix, Aba, an evening set aside to wine and dine with crème de la crème in the entertainment industry in celebration of the Nollywood screen goddess.

    According to Chuma, Ohaneze Ndigbo Nollywood has elected to take the celebration to next level as crown Princess Eziuche will be honoured with the prestigious award titled Adaugo Ndigbo of Nollywood at the grand reception party.

    “We heartily Congratulate Amb. Lady Beauty Emerald and thank the good people of Ngwa Land for finding a Nollywood Actress worthy of the highly revered title,” Chuma stated.

  • How people helped me get over my broken marriage, by Princess

    How people helped me get over my broken marriage, by Princess

    Damilola Adekoya, aka Princess is a popular Nigerian comedienne. Surprisingly, she also suffers pains, despite being in a profession that demands that she make people laugh. The thespian turned comedienne recently admitted to being traumatised by the breakup of her seven month old marriage contracted on May 8, 2013. As she admits, “Three years ago when I had a broken marriage, I was psychologically down, but it was the same thing that brought me down that became my strength; that is one of the psychological powers of comedy- it heals. People around also helped me in recovering from the most challenging period of my life.”

    Inside sources at the time revealed that the union was fraught with misunderstandings and disagreements, which often demanded the intervention of friends and relatives. Princess herself debunked the notion of a happy union at the breakup when she said, “We have been having issues since the wedding, but we still remained together hoping that we would be able to work it out. But apparently, we couldn’t work it out, hence the reason for our separation.”

    Although quite a number of reasons were rumoured to have caused the split between the celebrity and her not-so popular ex, hopefully, she is in a better place emotionally, although she has not been romantically linked to anyone in recent times.

  • A princess and her angels

    Meja Mwangi, the Kenyan novelist, in Going Down River Road, did a good parody of the all-mighty Kenyan parliament.   His fictive People’s Parliament, of the over-worked, underpaid, hungry and angry workers, during their break time, railed at the high-and-mighty.

    From their break-time hell-raising came an immortal line: “Germs don’t kill Africans, only hunger does!”  That, beyond the biting sarcasm, makes the pungent point: millions of Africans do need help — and maybe the government alone cannot provide all of that help.

    The American playwright, Arthur Miller, was even more audacious, gifting his creative space to the common man, the “everyday people”, in  his tragic play, Death of a Salesman.  Classical tragedies enjoyed the artistic pleasure of cruelly cutting to size, the proverbial movers-and-shakers, who often love to play god, over fellow men.  The gods, ever so malevolent, seize alleged hubris to mercilessly humble these greats.

    But Willy Loman (pun it as low man, and you probably would get the full gist), the tragic hero in Death of a Salesman, is not Julius Caesar, Mark Anthony or King Oedipus.  Still, by Miller’s contraption, he fell from his low and humble level to a no less profound tragedy.  To make the point hubris is no exclusive preserve of the great?

    Well, this is no foray into literary appreciation.  It is rather a dramatic way of saying today, Ripples stays the with lowly and the humble, even if the polity booms, quakes and aches with blistering crossfire, over President Muhammadu Buhari’s latest set of appointments.  Maybe next week, if the battle still rages, and the controversy still “trends” (as they say on the social media), Ripples may yet join in the fray.

    But right now, it is full attention on a princess and her angels, one the benefactor, the others the putative beneficiaries, of a heroic (o, that word again!) effort to ease the mass pain and anguish in the land — if not aborted for lack of funds.

    First, the “princess”.  Bukola Fasuyi is chief executive of Proclips Media Communication Ltd, a Lagos PR firm, movie producer, and fashion entrepreneur with a bent for culture.  She owns an Adire fashion line (wears and accessories), with a special eye for the Diaspora market.  Adire is a traditional Yoruba tie-and-dye fabric, native to Osogbo and Abeokuta.  She also runs a charity, Lady of Africa and Advocacy Foundation.

    By virtue of this charity, Miss Fasuyi would appear, indeed, a princess of the streets, with the NGO funnelling help to the distressed and disadvantaged, basically in the field of health and education.

    Indeed, it was in the cause of this charity that the “princess” met with her “angels” — poor children rendered orphans, after their parents, and former Lady Africa Foundation (afterwards cited as Lady of Africa) charity beneficiaries, had died of  cancer.

    One is Kayode Olabiyi, 12, whose mother, Bunmi Olabiyi died of breast cancer, in the course of raising the N7million estimated bill for her treatment in India.  Kayode, with his two siblings, Balikis and Emmanuel, were taken in by Lady of Africa, with the permission of their family.

    Another is Ifeoluwa Bello, 6, who also lost her single mother to breast cancer.   Baby Ife was barely nine months! After the death, according to a Lady of Africa release, Ife’s aunty (her mother’s elder sister) took over her care.  But she too would die when Ife was three.  Afterwards, Lady of Africa took over her care, with her family’s permission of course.

    Ifeoluwa, and the Olabiyi siblings, are only four of the 10 kids in the Miss Fasuyi’s charity NGO, all at different stages of formative education, courtesy of a collaborative scholarship by a Lagos private school, Tohibat Group of Schools, at Gbagada Estate, in Lagos.

    The Foundation had approached the school’s founder, Alhaja Tohibat Adeniji, herself a philanthropist, for help.  According to the Foundation, the school agreed to take in the children, and bear part of the cost.

    Instead of N450, 000 per child for a term, the school charged each of the children, all boarders, N50, 000 a term, plus another N30, 000 monthly fee for boarding expenses.  Thus, instead of N450, 000, each child pays N140, 000 a term, N310, 000 less than the normal fee.

    Not only that: Tohibat School is also in the process of helping two of the Foundation pupils secure admission into the Iran University in Ghana, an Islamic faith-based university, with a N200, 000 yearly fee, and another N50, 000 a month for feeding and allied living expenses.

    Still, why would Lady of Africa charity send these poor kids to expensive private schools in Lagos, where the state government runs free schools?  On the surface, no reason — for the government runs free schools because it pays the bill for the majority poor, who cannot afford it.

    But Lagos public schools are day-schools; and the Foundation was anxious the children, who otherwise could have become street urchins, and maybe laboratories for future criminals, needed boarding facilities for something closest to a home setting, so that it is only during the holidays that the Foundation has to worry about providing them homes.

    Despite the Foundation’s efforts and Tohibat’s gamely response, it is a case of the spirit willing but the body tired.  Tried as it has, Lady of Africa has been finding it difficult to raise the children’s school fees, thus subjecting these young minds to some hiccups and disruptions.

    On the Tohibat front, it so happens that a new set of investors are taking over the school.  Alhaja Adeniji, 92, the founder, is advanced in age.  But it is not quite the coming of a Pharaoh who knew no Joseph — no.  The new investors are still willing to help.

    Indeed, the Foundation has got a further rebate of N40, 000 on each child: the cumulative fee is now N100, 000, instead of N140, 000, aside from an additional N10, 000 rebate for ICT training (with other pupils paying N15, 000).  So, instead of N140, 000, each child now pays N110, 000.

    The snag though, is that the N100, 000 would now be paid off-front, at the beginning of session, instead of the former practice of N50, 000 off-front, while the monthly N30, 000 feeding fee is paid as it falls due.  That payment front-loading creates a huge challenge for a cash-strapped NGO.

    That therefore is the essence of this appeal — for the Foundation needs urgent help, if it is not to abort the education of these children.  If help does not come, the children would not resume with others, when Lagos schools reopen in two weeks.

    ‘If help does not come, the children would not resume with others, when Lagos schools reopen in two weeks’

    You want to help?  Thank you.  Please reach Princess Fasuyi, of the Lady of Africa Empowerment and Advocacy Foundation on 08027647056 and 08093287614 or visit the Foundation’s website: www.ladyofafrica.org.

    If you did, you have save the soul of a part of Nigeria’s future.

  • 50 hearty cheers to a princess

    50 hearty cheers to a princess

    Last Saturday, family members and friends joined Princess Florence Ibukunolu Atobatele at The Truth Christian Mission Inc., in Abule-Egba, Lagos to celebrate her 50th birthday. AMIDU ARIJE was there.

    The hall of the Truth Christian Mission Inc. in Abule Egba, Lagos, was tastefully decorated for the 50th birthday celebration of Princess Florence Ibukunolu Atobatele.

    Princess Atobatele wore a cream lace with purple head gear and matching shoes.

    Her husband, Prince Supo Atobatele, who was in white Danshiki and purple cap, ensured everything went well.

    The celebrator welcomed guests with hugs and waved to others.

    While guests waited for the commencement of the ceremony, many were seen cracking jokes with others engaging in private talks.

    There was no dull moment. The life band of The Musik-Gen Band thrilled the gathering with melodious songs.  It was, indeed, an unforgettable experience for guests.

    The event began with hymns.

    It was followed by an opening prayer by Pastor Israel Adesoye.

    Princess Atobatele was ushered to the podium amid dancing by family members and friends

    Their entry had some wondering if it was a wedding. She was welcomed by her husband who was already seated. He stood up to join them on the dancing floor. His dancing steps amazed everyone present.

    Masters of ceremony, Pastors Wale Omoloju and Kola Akinola ensured that everything went as planned.

    General Overseer, The Truth Christian Mission Inc. Rev Olatunde Shoyemi was the chairman of occasion. He also delivered a speech. He spoke on the topic ‘Do we have to celebrate birthday’.

    Rev Shoyemi said that celebrating birthday is not as sinful as it is being perceived in some quarters. Birthday, he said, is to appreciate God and take stock of one’s activities in life.

    “Celebrating birthday is not evil, because what they are doing is to give thanks to God for sparing their lives,” he said.

    Rev Shoyemi prayed for long life and prosperity for the celebrator.

    A group of entertainers, the Destiny Boys, added to the joy of the day with their brilliant musical performance. They thrilled everyone.

    Musical interludes continued as another musical group, Solution, came to the fore to entertain the guests with beautiful rendition.

    The Managing Director, The Nation, Mr Victor Ifijeh, supervised the cutting of the cake.

    He described the celebrator as marvellous and beautiful.

    “A beautiful celebrant about to cut a beautiful cake and it is marvellous in our eyes,” he said.

    He reminded the gathering the purpose for the gathering saying: “50 solid years is what we are celebrating here today”

    Ifijeh described the retirement of the celebrator from her nursing job before 60 as glorious and a thing of joy.

    “To know that you retired gloriously before 60 is a thing of joy; you have just begun; your star will shine from glory to glory.

    At the count of JESUS, the two layers gold cake was cut by the celebrator and her husband.

    All posed for pictures with the cake.

    A toast to the celebrator was made by the Special Assistant to the Director-General of the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) on Special Duties, Mr Sotin Babatunde.

    He described her as peace-loving and gentle woman. ‘For she is a jolly good fellow, so say all of us, hip hip hurray,’ he sang as the toast was made.

    The celebrator described the day as joyful and exciting. She thanked God for sparing her life.

    Prince Atobatele  wished her long life and prosperity as he described her as a perfect woman who loves peace.

  • Niger Delta princess feeds Bayelsa

    Niger Delta princess feeds Bayelsa

    The charming fair-woman was mistaken by the anxious elders, youths, children and women for an oyibo (white) woman. They were further convinced when she spoke like an American.

    Little did they know that Princess Modupe Ozolua is one of the amazons of the Niger Delta. In fact, a Niger Delta princess from Edo State. On discovering her origin, the indigenes of various communities in Ogbia, including Otuoke, the hometown of President Goodluck Jonathan, appreciated her with a standing ovation.

    Ozolua brought the train of her foundation, Body Enhancement Foundation (BEF), to Bayelsa State and berthed first in Ogbia. The Princess and her crew of 18 experts established their temporary base at the Otuoke Cottage Hospital from where their food and medical mission kicked off.

    The foundation was in Bayelsa to give free medical treatments and distribute bags of rice to communities. As expected, after the princess, in company with Madam Cynthia, went round the communities in Ogbia, the first beneficiaries, to inform them about her mission,  residents trooped to the cottage hospital to have their share of the gesture.

    The elderly, the youths and children found their ways to the hospital complex. For five days, the hospital experienced a beehive of activities. The sick hurried to go and lodge their health complaints. The visually-impaired moved gently down the busy road while the youths and children raced down to partake in the generosity of the Niger Delta queen.

    In fact, in a twinkle, all the seats in the hospital waiting room were occupied by the people of Ogbia including the paramount ruler of Otueke and other chiefs. Nobody was left out. Those who could not go on their own because of their health conditions were taken there by their loved ones.

    After undergoing examinations by the team of doctors, many of the beneficiaries had free eye surgeries; went home with free eyeglasses and drugs. They sang the praises of the princess. On sighting heaps of bags of rice, the women, elders and youths refused to go home. They sat patiently to collect their share of the rice.

    Could this gesture be politically-motivated especially coming at a time of campaigns for 2015? Princess Ozolua quickly cleared the air. She said there was no political motive behind her gesture. It was just coincidental that the period scheduled by the foundation to undertake the mission fell within a political period.

    She said: “Most people may think it is a politically-motivated thing. But I don’t bother to hesitate because I have many friends as politicians. But in all the parties, it doesn’t make a difference for me.

    “I am not a politician. I don’t belong to any political party. That will not stop me or my organisation from going anywhere in the federation and it is a very bad habit that when something is good, people try to associate it with hidden intentions.

    “People in Bayelsa State based on what we have seen, definitely need more programmes like this. There are so many places you can’t even reach by land.

    “There are so many communities you will look at and say ‘oh my God there is s much wealth coming from this place but they are so underdeveloped’. It is very disturbing.”

    Ozolua explained that the mission was a bi-monthly affair and inherently part of the programmes of the foundation. On how Bayelsa was selected, she said: “Every two months, what we do, is we randomly pick a state in Nigeria. Bayelsa was picked at the last random selection”.

    She added: “It is a programme we have been doing for 11 years. We also do free reconstruction surgeries like deformities and cataracts.” She said Otuoke was chosen as a base for the programme in Ogbia because of the medical facility in the community.

    Princess could not hide her feelings over the level of poverty in the land. She said people have an erroneous belief that all was well in the state because the President hails from there.

    “Unfortunately, when people hear Bayelsa, the first thing they think of is that because the President is from the area. They assume that everybody is okay. That is a very wrong impression.

    “There are many people suffering all over the country. There is a great deal of poverty. I was even in my state, Edo State in Sptember. We donated rice and medication. We didn’t even do eye programme like this.

    “Even my local government which is not the poorest local government in Nigeria; people were on the ground packing rice that mixed with sand. It goes to show that there is a great deal of need in the country and people should reignite the spirit of help.

    “Everything is by the grace of God. Nothing prevents any of us from having an eye problem tomorrow and it is not everybody that can afford to fly out of the country for care.

    “So, what do you do? The first thing is, if you can’t afford to go to the hospital, you look for an NGO or someone that can do it for you. That is why organisations like ours, Body Enhancement Foundation, is on ground to help.”

    She said the foundation donated food items, 650 bags of 50 kg rice, and offered free medical mission to the people of Bayelsa State. She said the mission was undertaken in collaboration with the Nigeria Customs Service, Immigration, Dana, a member of the House of Representatives, Ibrahim Gusau, Auto Plaza and other organisations.

    “During this mission, which took place for five days, in the eight LGAs in the state, we offered free ophthalmology, gave away eye glasses, reading glasses, medication and others to the under-privileged individuals in the state.”

    In his marks, the Chairman who declared the event open in the state, King Obigbomikimiki of Opume Kingdom, A. J. Turner, described Ozolua as “our sister and good woman”.

    Turner who was represented by the Commissioner for Land and Survey, Mr. Frebie Akeni, asked people to imitate the good heart of the Princess saying judgement before God depends on one’s goodness to people.

    Also, the Commissioner for Health, Mr. Ayibatonye Owei, who represented Governor Seriake Dickson said Ozolua came to empower the people the state with good health.

    “We are happy for this gesture. Our government will like to encourage all other foundations to imitate the spirits of Ozolua”, he said.

    The elated people of Ogbia gave three happy cheers to Ozolua to commend her gestures. The Vice-Chairman of Otuoke Community Development Committee, Chief Obodo Cornelius also thanked the princess on behalf of all the benefitting communities.

  • They call me princess

    They call me princess

    •A portrait of Motunlayo Adefunke Sofowote

    Then in mid-2014, a revised edition of the original 1998 novel, They Call Me Princess by Motunlayo Sofowote was published there were more than a few people who wondered how the author, bedridden and fighting for her life, could find the strength of purpose, and indeed, the presence of mind to execute such a project. But that was only the second book published by the woman in the final year of her life.

    However, as though as final statement and reminder, They Call Me Princess will now go down in history as the very last known work of art by Motunlayo Sofowote made available to the public during her lifetime. And how apt, how absolutely apt it is, this simple, quiet, unassuming statement – They Call Me Princess!

    For so they did. In their hundreds and thousands, or perhaps even hundreds of thousands. Wherever she went, she was regarded and treated as royalty. But this was no surprise… You only had to spend a few minutes with the woman to feel that without a doubt, you had just come across a true and wonderful human being, something rare, something royally unique. Something beautiful.

    And beautiful she was inside and out. In fact, many would agree most emphatically that her outward beauty was only further intensified by her dazzling yet welcoming beauty of her spirit which could never be diminished; not even in the most literally painful years of her life toward the end. This was made all the more obvious when in the excruciating throes of the final stage of cancer, she lost all of her trademark long-flowing silver hair and was recommended a wig to cover the resultant baldness.

    To oblige her caregivers, I believe, and even more, to shield the rest of us, her loved ones, from the sad reality that her baldness so vividly highlighted, she tried on the wig for a time. However, not many days had passed before she decided that she would have no more of it. With a twinkle in her eye, she said: “I will not wear this wig anymore. If I am beautiful, I am beautiful.”

    And she was beautiful.

    Yes, they called her princess. They called her friend and mother too. Her four biological children very quickly had to learn that there were a far greater number of people who, while not related by blood, had sufficient right to look to her as a mother; by virtue of her own disposition toward, and love for, them. And she loved them all. With a true motherly love that brought many a biological mother to her in curious wonderment at the effect that this woman quite unassumingly had on their own children. It was therefore, not long before there became untold numbers of mothers who looked upon her as a model for their motherhood.

    It was not only mothers however, who were drawn to her and who found themselves making Motunlayo a mentor of sorts. Women and girls, and indeed, men of all ages who had within them an appreciation of beauty and goodness were invariably drawn to her through varied encounters and scenarios. Even those who might ordinarily have a base outlook on life often found themselves wishing to be better and working on themselves as a direct result of having met her.

    Motunlayo made friends of all kinds everywhere. From road-side sellers to captains of industry and heads of government, Motunlayo was truly the sort of person who could eat with beggars and dine with kings. And she did both.

    It is therefore not surprising that they called her princess. Whether she was helping others through quiet and secret philanthropic acts, or drawing public attention to causes that needed intervention through her annual charity concerts, she always was royal.

    In the 67 years of her beautiful life, she left a definite mark of positivity on the world and everyone who met her. And she will continue to do so, on everyone who will yet meet her through her works and the stories of her which are bound to be preserved and spread abroad.

    Motunlayo was, indeed, one of those one-in-a-million, once-in-a-lifetime, Hallelujah-I-met-you people whose lives, however long or short, leave a firm imprint on this Earth.

    As a friend, mother, teacher or princess, Motunlayo’s foremost objective was to serve her GOD, to whom she constantly sought to draw nearer, through her life, and her very essence. And now that she has left the confines of the physical, one can be confident that she is now free to fly upward, nearer His Presence, according to the natural law of Gravitation, which cannot but suck up a spirit as light, and as beautiful as Motunlayo’s toward those Realms of Eternal Beauty, where like spirits are permitted to serve their King forever.

    Even now, her pure ringing laughter is to be heard, a happy child of the Light, singing songs of praise in beautiful soprano, to the warm smiles of those angelic helpers who guide her path upward, to a Garden in which she can be yet another beautiful flower of Creation.

    *Bibisanmi is son of the late Motunlayo