The
25-minute journey on a motorcycle from Akoda junction to Odeomu to Gaga to
Odansidi to Omodeere to Olodan to Abese to Ayetoro and finally to Tonkere
village, all in Ayedaade Local Government Area of Osun State was uneventful.
Members of the sleepy and rustic communities, from their homestead, waved at Saturday Tribune while some
who met them on the way greeted them expectantly and some currency exchanged
hands. They were on the trail of a woman found to have been sired by a
ghost and married to a ghost.
Before
now, chilling stories had been told of individuals who continued to experience
life even after their clear deaths. The Yoruba call them Akudaaya. To the
Hausa, they are Satalwa. Time after time, there were stories of how the dead,
who were supposed to be six feet under the ground, would still stick around on
the surface of the earth and lead lives as normal, regular human beings albeit
in faraway places where their chances of bumping into either families or acquaintances
who had previously bade them goodbye from this world are virtually zero.
Many
have dismissed such stories as fictions, hallucinations or fabrications, but
the recent experience of a 20-year-old Taiyelolu Abdulrahman, whose father, who
died almost 20 years ago, nurtured till she was married to another dead or
“ghost” husband, is lending credence to such weird developments.
It
was a Herculean task getting Taiyelolu to grant Saturday Tribune an interview
because, according to her, she had already spoken at length with a popular
Yoruba magazine which she claimed only used her story for economic reasons.
“Where is the assistance they promised would come my way as a result of the
interview I granted them?”
Her
father-in-law, Mr Raufu Gbadamosi, also was not favourably disposed to
Taiyelolu granting another press interview. He showed disapproval when he shook
his head, disappeared into his room and then reappeared with a cap and just
exited the house.
When
she finally opened up, it turned out that nothing could be more bizarre than
Taiyelolu’s story. She and her twin brother, Kehinde, grew up with their father
in a flat at the Ajah area of Lagos. They led a relatively comfortable life in
the house where they only depended on generator as the only source of
electricity. Although their father was not engaged in any kind of work, he
provided for them.
“My
father was not working. He never left the house except on a few occasions at
night. But if I asked for N50, 000, he gave it to me. We had no visitors and we
visited nobody,” she said.
All
they had to do were sleep, eat and watch home videos.
Asked
about her mother, she said she and her twin brother grew up to know only their
father. They did not see any woman with him. To go out of the house, their
father gave the twins a small gourd each which they simply clasped to their
palms and then they burst out on the road and board vehicles to the market to
purchase food items like wheat, semovita, macaroni, spaghetti and rice. They
never consumed amala (yam flour meal).
On
a particular day, however, Taiyelolu forgot to take her gourd and as she
stepped out of the house, what confronted her was a cemetery with a lot of
vaults and a bushy environment.
She
screamed and dashed back inside. Then, her father told her to pick the gourd,
atona (guide) as it was called. As she clasped the object to her palm and then
ventured out, this time, she found herself on a busy tarred road.
Another
incident which frightened her happened in the night. “My father went out
whenever he wanted but it was always around 10.00 or 11.00 p.m. He would not
take anyone along with him. But there was a day I begged him to take me out to
where he usually went and he obliged. When we got there, something strange and
fearful happened. It was like a canteen and there, I saw a small cooking stand
with a big pot on it without firewood or fire and the food was boiling. I asked
my father how it was possible for food to cook without firewood and fire and
the woman selling the food became angry and slapped me. She asked my father who
I was; that I was not part of them but only wanted to expose their secrets. My
father begged her and we left the place,” she remarked.
After
the incident, her father refused to take her out again so that she would not be
privy to the secrets and circumstances surrounding their true identities. Since
then, she refused to take food from her father, but only cooked her own food.
By
the time Taiyelolu came of age, her father did not allow her the choice of a
husband, but asked her to marry someone identified as Abdulazeez. The man moved
in with them and behaved like her father.
Soon,
she got pregnant. And when she eventually went into labour, she said her father
went out, brought back a particular kind of leaf which he applied on her navel
and she was delivered of a baby boy without any complication. Her father, who
acted as the midwife, took care of the placenta. She bore her two other boys in
the same manner. Her children were named Abdul Qayum (now eight years old),
‘Rokeeb (four) and Jamiu (two and a half).
But
what revealed the true identities of her father and husband? She disclosed that
all the jealously guarded secrets began to come to the open when Kehinde
declined to marry a lady recommended by their father.
They
continued their routine life until their father considered Kehinde mature
enough to get married and brought a lady home for him. But Kehinde was said to
have refused outright to marry “one of them.” Taiyelolu said she asked him what
he meant by “one of them” but he told her not to bother as she was only a woman
who was oblivious of what was happening.
“One
day, Kehinde was eating and he suddenly coughed, slumped and died. My father
did not feel any sorrow as a result of this. He buried my brother in an unknown
place. When I asked him about where he buried him, he said some Muslim clerics
had come to pray over his body and he had buried it. Not convinced by his
response, I said to him: “When I had my babies, no clerics came for the naming,
but they came for the burial of my brother?’”
Disturbed
by the shocking death of her brother, Taiyelolu confronted her father that she
wanted to know his family. That decision marked the beginning of her journey
into a new world.
“Eventually,
my father agreed to take me and the children to his hometown, Offa, Kwara
State. He said he was from the imam’s family. When we almost got to his family
house, he said he wanted to check on someone close by and pointed the house to
us. He asked us to ask for Alhaji Hussein Salmoni, his uncle. When we met his
uncle and explained ourselves to him, he was taken aback. He eventually showed
us his grave. He said my father died over 20 years ago,” she said.
Amid
bewilderment, Taiyelolu left for the only place she knew as home, Ajah, Lagos,
but could not locate their house again. What worsened her situation was the
mysterious disappearance of the gourd which her father had given her and could
have guided her back to the house.
She
went to Ilorin in an effort to locate her mother’s family house which her
father told her was Isale Koto. She managed to strike up conversations with
some people who introduced her to a radio presenter who narrated her story on
air. She also met a lady who she followed to Ede, Osun State, and stayed with
for about a month. It was while in that city that she traced her husband’s
parents.
She
claimed that she was walking by the road one day when a car parked by her side
and the driver told her that it was her birthday and in order to felicitate
with her, gave her a handset with a SIM card. Taiyelolu is uncertain of her
age, but assumed that she could be more than 20.
“It
was when I got to ‘this world’ that I realised that I am too young to have
given birth to three children with the fourth on the way. Also, I did not know
that there is a place where people struggled to earn a living until I got here.
It saddens me that I now wake up every day with no money.”
She
said she never attended a school, but that her father had the knowledge of the
Qur’an and had western education. According to her, her father was the one who
taught her and her brother Arabic and a bit of western education,” she said. It
is obvious that Taiyelolu is truly versed in the recitation of the Qur’an. Her
children now attend a primary school in the village.
On
how she got to Tonkere, she said she went to observe the evening prayer at a
mosque in Ede when, after prayers, she was chatting with the imam and an old
man appeared and told her in clear terms that she was suffering.
The
man then asked her why she was obstinate about returning the children with her
to Tonkere, her husband’s place of birth. The man said if she refused to do so
within three days, something unpleasant would become of the children and the
man disappeared.
Then
she asked the imam if he saw the old man who just interrupted their
conversation, but the imam said no. She then collected N200 from the cleric,
fetched her children and the four of them, at about after 8.00 p.m., boarded a
motorcycle to Akoda junction for N50.
At
the junction, she asked another cyclist to take her to Tonkere but the man,
because of the fact that it was late in the day, charged her N1000, whereas she
only had N150. But it was necessary that the children got to Tonkere that night
because their father, who was deceased, demanded that she took them to his
people.
As
she pleaded with the cyclist, a car parked by them and mediated in the matter.
The driver asked the cyclist to convey the woman and her children to their
destination for N500, which was the usual fare. The man gave the cyclist the
N500, wrote down the motorcycle’s number and warned the cyclist to take the
passengers to no place but the mosque at Tonkere.
As
they alighted from the motocycle at Tonkere, Taiyelolu said her husband
appeared to her physically.
She
said he pointed to the shop opposite the mosque as his mother’s and the third
building to the shop as his father’s house, saying “I should ask for his
father, Pa Gbadamosi. As they conversed, her husband said a lady who was
passing by, Tosin, was his sister and he called her.” Between the time
Taiyelolu looked in the direction of the lady and looked back in her husband’s
direction, he had disappeared.
The
lady is with her husband’s people now, but they did not receive her with open
arms because the aged parents of Abdulazeez were confused about how their first
son, who died at a tender age, could have fathered three children. They are
suspicious of their supposed daughter-in-law and are acting cautiously around
her. But she dismissed any suspicious of band motives asking why she would want
to lie herself into a poor home.
Also,
Taiyelolu’s mother-in-law, the Iyalode of Tonkere, had been down with stroke
and the father-in-law is a farmer. Financially, they are not capable of
supporting Taiyelolu and her children.
The
lady, who said the clothes she uses now were given to her, added that they were
rags, compared to the ones she wore in her father’s house. What pointed to the
fact that she could truly be from another world was the way she was lamenting
openly about the treatment meted out to her by her in-laws. She said if she had
made up her story, rather than bringing her children to the old mud house, she
would have taken them to the governor’s house. The mud house, she said, did not
compare with her father’s house in “the other world.” She said she only left
her father’s house with a black bag and a Qur’an, which are still in her
possession.
She
also claimed to have dreamt of her father once, who was all tears, lamenting
with his finger in his mouth that he warned his daughter not to embark on this
journey. She said her husband pleaded with her in her dreams each time his
people offended her. She said her husband said the reason he insisted she took
his children to his parents was for his parents to have the joy of raising his
children as they did not have such opportunity with him even as a first child.
The
parents said they could not remember where they buried Abdulazeez.
The
survival of heavily pregnant Taiyelolu and the future of her three children
pose a challenge to her. She said the aged parents of her “ghost” husband could
no longer work, hence, the fate of her children hung in the balance.
When
she called our reporter last Monday, she said she was having signs that she
would soon put to bed. She, therefore, appealed to the Osun State governor, Mr
Rauf Aregbesola; his wife, Alhaja Sherifat, other well-meaning Nigerians,
including corporate organisations and non-governmental organisations to come to
her aid by empowering her so that her future and that of her three children
abandoned could be secure.
What
about her husband? She says he these days appears only in her dreams.
No comments:
Post a Comment