From Friends With Love...(1)
Well like I said two editions ago, I sat down to
calculate my next move after I was told the best way to get support from people
was to bring them to village for onsite experience and assessment so they could
appreciate the herculean task I was saddled with.
My first target, naturally were my colleagues in the
office. We had just started collective prayers online which we did using a
WhatsApp group. At a point we discussed we should do a charity work as a
catalyst to our prayers. I seized the opportunity to mention the village and
painted the picture of the guinea worm infected child and the sorry sights I’d
seen. They asked what they could do and I suggested they visit the village with
me. We fixed a date in December!
Preparation was grand. My colleagues were so
passionate about this. They suggested we should not go there empty-handed hence
we contributed money to buy gifts (palliatives as it is now known). Anyway, the
things we bought ranged from bags of rice, household detergents to bags of pure
water and sanitary pads for women. Also, I implored them to check their houses
for old clothes for adults and kids, shoes, bags, school bags or anything that
they were no longer using but could still be of use to others. Not less than eight
bags were gathered plus one hundred bags of sachet water. We were good to go.
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| Checking bags of gifts |
We left in two SUVs and one Hilux truck on a Saturday
morning. It was a long and tedious journey which was strange to my colleagues
but which I was already used to. I drove in front and the other vehicles
followed me. Luckily for us the rains had stopped and the stream was drying up
hence it was easier to drive through. I could sense some uneasiness in my
colleagues as we got to the first Village and I turned left into a thicker
forest. I remember one of my colleagues asking me “are you sure there are
people living where you are taking us to?” I turned and gave her a re-assuring
smile.
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| Arrival at the village |
We got to the village and packed under some trees. The
villagers came out en masse and we started distributing the items. Two funny
incidents occurred in the course of doing this. The first was a fight between
two women over some of the items we were distributing. One grabbed it and the
other snatched it. This led to a very bitter fight and at a time the two women
were inseparable. The husband to one of them got involved and decided to scatter the
good gesture from friends. When it appeared that this would lead to a community
clash, we decided to suspend the palliative and return home. I must say a big
thank you to my friend Uzoma for her tenacity at that point. She insisted we
should not let a man disrupt our mission and deny the rest of the villagers of
their blessings. We moved to the only primary school in the village and got the
people more organized. The man came too and I had a pet talk with him and his
response was that we allowed his wife to be battered while she was collecting
her gift. We had to appease him with gifts for him and his wife. Only then were we able to continue the sharing of the
gifts. Well, we became friends till this day.
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| At the LEA Primary School, Gbaukuchi Village. |
The second incident happened towards the end of our mission. We had finished sharing the rice
and a very aged woman came with a walking stick. She could not talk very well and
had lost most of her teeth. All she did was point to the rice someone else had
collected signifying she wanted rice too. Well the rice had finished and we
felt bad. One of us gave money to buy rice (an amount that could buy more than
the quantity she would have got) but she collected
the money, dropped it and pointed to the rice again.
These two incidents made my friends emotional. I could
recall one of them said “imagine how the things we take for granted in the city
matter a lot to these folks.” At the end of the visit, the villagers were
extremely happy, particularly the children who got toys, sandals, clothes and
school bags and the adults who got what most of them would later use as
ceremonial wears.
My appreciation goes to Bukola Ogunleye, Martin
Elugbaju, Emeka Igbeka, Adepegba Oduntan and Chris Olayinka who made the trip
and the gesture possible. Special thanks to Uzoma Ekwebelem for her commitment and
resolve to get everybody together for this cause. Special thanks to Saidu
Abdullahi for his leadership, Solomon Aligweke for providing us with his Hilux
truck to convey the goods; and to Danjuma too for lending his SUV. You guys
wrote your name in gold in the hearts of the villagers.
When we got to the office the following week, it was
with sober hearts that all my colleagues then, called me for a meeting and
asked in specific terms “what do the villagers need most for now…?”
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| Friends with large hearts |










Good work Sir, thanks for being a medium of light to this community. God bless you.
ReplyDeleteI can't wait for the next edition, kudos Sir.
ReplyDeleteGod bless you and your crew, you will not miss your rewards in Jesus name. More grace!!!
ReplyDeleteMore grace Brother.
ReplyDeleteGood work sir....
ReplyDeleteGod bless u Sir and your friends also. May u receive the reward for your dedication to the things of God. Amen
ReplyDeleteI bless God for your life bro Lanre. More strength to carry out this work God has placed in your hands sir.
ReplyDeletewow
ReplyDeleteBrilliant Lanre, May God bless you abundantly for sharing this and giving us all the ability to contribute. Pele.
ReplyDeleteAmazing work of God that He is doing through your ministry! May God almighty continue to strengthen and empower you to do more greater things for the people in this community.
ReplyDeleteMay God bless all your friends for their heart of giving and act of kindness.
Thanks for sharing!!!
Good job to you and your crew.God will reward you
ReplyDelete