Monday21May2012

Help Comes From Unexpected Places

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( 12 Votes )

Help Comes From Unexpected Places

By Uche Nworah


 
Mike woke up that particular Saturday morning feeling like he was carrying the weight of his country’s (Nigeria) problems on his shoulders. He had only five days to his planned book presentation, the invitation cards were yet to go out and other logistical arrangements hadn’t yet been completed. He had arrived Abuja from Lagos the previous night with the last Virgin Nigeria flight and planned to use the weekend to conclude some of the arrangements.

Exhausted and his body needing more sleep, Mike managed to drag himself up from the bed and made his way to the bathroom. The mirror confirmed to him what he had been saying to himself all along; he was gradually turning into a wreck. His eyes looked worn and tired and his face didn’t have the boyish spark anymore. Mike knew that he needed to slow down; he hadn’t had any proper holidays in a long while. Although his teaching job in the United Kingdom where he lives allows him regular holiday breaks when the students are away, he never ever gets round to actually relaxing and enjoying such breaks. Like some other Africans, Mike considers himself very much still as a team member of the rat race, work, work, work, hustle, and hustle. He often wonders if he would ever get out of the race.

A little later, Mike’s phone rang; it was Nze Sunny Ogbu, his friend of several years on the line. He had picked Mike up from the airport the previous night.

“Nna, how we go waka today?” Sunny asked

“Ehm, Ehm”. Mike stuttered, he didn’t know where to start, his brain refused to function that particular minute.

“Sunny, please let me call you back in a few minutes when I get out of the bathroom”.

Shortly after, Mike’s host in Abuja, Okechi Precious Osuala, the General Manager of Chelsea Hotel Abuja tapped on the door. He was about leaving for work and was just checking up on Mike.

Mike thanked God for sending friends like Sunny and Okechi his way. They have been friends since their university days at Uyo. On graduation Sunny went to live abroad but has since relocated back to Abuja -Nigeria. Okechi choose to ride the storm in Nigeria and has now made good. Ever since, both have been trying to convince Mike to consider relocating back to Nigeria but Mike was still undecided.

Later in the day, Sunny picked Mike up in his 2005 model Toyota Camry; he had recently bought the car as a surprise present for his wife, Helen, who would be arriving from the UK the next day. Sunny planned to surprise her at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja when she arrives. He had already arranged for a decorator to wrap the car in ribbons at the airport. Sunny hasn’t seen his wife for months and was quite excited at being reunited with her and their daughter Chiazokam.

As Sunny and Mike toured Abuja that Saturday giving out the invites and tying up all other logistics arrangement, little did they know that the rest of the night would turn into a nightmare for them and shake the very foundations of their faith.

By the time they were done, it was already past 6 pm but they still had one more call to make. Next, they visited the proposed chairman of the book presentation, Chief George Moghalu at his home. They arrived to meet Retired General Lawrence Onoja in his company and spent the next two hours discussing Nigerian affairs and Mike’s proposed book presentation.

A little after 8 pm, Sunny and Mike left Chief Moghalu’s residence, they wanted to drop off Mohammed Adams, Mike’s friend who works at the federal ministry of information and who has been with them all day helping out with the planning.

Sunny drove into the wide open unsecured FCDA Quarters in Wuse 11 where Mohammed lives at about 8.30 pm. As they drove through the untarred small stretch of road towards Mohammed’s flat, they failed to notice the white Golf car trailing behind them. The night was still busy, people were going about their business and Abuja was supposed to be a safe town compared to the more volatile Lagos and Port Harcourt towns.

Finally Sunny stopped the car in front of Mohammed’s flat; in that split second all hell broke loose. Five heavily armed men surrounded the vehicle, with their guns pointed at Sunny, Mike and Mohammed, they barked out others simultaneously.

“Put your hands up and come down from the vehicle immediately”

“Don’t shout; don’t try anything funny or you will be dead men” 

Quietly Sunny, Mike and Mohammed obeyed the gun men’s orders. The trio have since imbibed the popular Nigerian saying - never argue with the man with the gun.

Mike and Mohammed were commandeered to the back seat eventually, one of the gun men took possession of the vehicle and positioned himself in the driving seat; another dispossessed Sunny of his mobile phones and cash. Sunny had an additional 60,000 Naira in the glove compartment, money he had taken from his office earlier in the day for household use that weekend. Two other gun men wedged Mike and Mohammed in at the back seat with their guns pointed to their sides.

“Keep your heads down and don’t say a word”, the gun man to Mike’s right shouted in unadulterated English. Mike doubted the theory which says that robbers were uneducated social miscreants; the gun men who now held them hostage were wide off that description. In the day, the gun men could pass for corporate executives, though Mike could not really see their faces, but their voices betrayed their youthfulness.

Mike wondered who the real victims of the incident were; himself, Sunny and Mohammed or the gun men and Nigeria’s other Generation Yahoo, whose concept of enterprise have now been reconditioned by the social realities around them: unemployment, fading dreams, government apathy to problems facing the youth and institutional corruption. Mike decided to derail his thoughts to concentrate on the matter at hand. If he lived, he would continue with the philosophising another day.

Suddenly, the gun man who now had control of the vehicle manoeuvred the car and faced the exit; his driving dexterity showed that he must have been thought tactical driving skills at the Lawrence Anini and Monday Osunbor Driving Academy. He bellowed to the other gun man to get in quickly and they sped off leaving a hale of dust behind them, while the get away car followed behind. The operation had lasted less than 60 seconds just like Nicolas Cage’s Gone in Sixty Seconds.

Benumbed by shock and surprise, Sunny managed to raise alarm inside the estate but the residents preferred to mind their own business, they locked their doors even more securely. Sunny was worried at the fate of Mike and Mohammed whom the gun men had abducted, he feared for their lives, especially for Mike whom he and Okechi Precious Osuala had convinced to bring his book presentation to Abuja. He managed to contact a few friends in Abuja and they raised a search party immediately.

As the gun men sped through the streets of Abuja, Mike tried to engage them in a discussion; he had noticed that three of the robbers were of the Igbo tribe as they spoke Igbo amongst themselves though tinged in coded slangs. Mike tried to play the ethnic sentiment card and pleaded with the gun men in Igbo language to let them go, he told them that he had a little over two thousand pounds in his laptop bag which was inside the vehicle and some thousands of naira. He also told them that he had his Compaq laptop, Fuji digital camera, Olympus digital voice recorder inside the bag as well which they could sell for cash. Mike falsely assumed that he was making progress, he was getting round to negotiating with his captors on how to retrieve some of the files in his laptop and memory stick including his 3 years PhD research work and book manuscripts. Mike didn’t finish making his life saving speech when he felt a heavy blow to his head. The gun man seating in the front passenger’s seat had cracked open his head with the butt of his gun.

“We told you to shut up, I’m from Kaduna, I will shoot you now, I don’t care about you”, he retorted.

Mike felt a momentary blinding flash, in his bended seating position he was able to feel his head, his sticky fingers told him that blood was gushing out. In an instant his whole face was drenched in his blood, likewise his clothes. Suddenly he felt a sharp jab to his neck; it was the gun man to his right this time.

“This man, stop staining me with your blood”, he told Mike in a very harsh tone. Mike wanted to tell him that he couldn’t help it but he dared not utter a word anymore. Mike searched his mind for options but all he could think of was to ask God to forgive his sins and to receive his soul. Mike was certain that they were going to be executed.

As the gun men drove on, Mike noticed that their tone of voice became harsher; they seemed to be irked by something. Mike heard them mention the words police checkpoints severally; perhaps they were planning their manoeuvre in case they were confronted by the police. Mike prayed that they don’t run into any police checkpoints, he knew quite well that the robbers will not stop for the police and that this may lead to a police chase or exchange of gun fire. Should that occur, he didn’t want to imagine the outcome, not only could they be caught in the crossfire but the police may even round him and Mohammed up alongside the robbers and treat them as part of the gang.

After about 45 minutes of driving, Mike felt the car slow down, he noticed that the car had veered off the road and was now driving through a rough terrain. Suddenly the car stopped and the gun men commandeered Mike and Mohammed to come down. As they alighted from the car, Mike staggered and managed to steady himself by the car. He was beginning to feel faint from the loss of blood, his head was almost exploding and pain racked his whole body.

The entire forest where they found themselves was enveloped in darkness, Mike continued to pray silently. He wasn’t even praying for God to deliver them, rather he was asking God to accept their souls for he considered himself and Mohammed as dead men walking.

When one of the robbers remarked in menacing tone that, “Now the main business begins”, Mike thought that they were now going to be prepared and offered as ritual sacrifices. Tales of such practices are constantly reported in the Nigerian media especially in the Abuja area where hordes of corpses have been discovered recently with the vital organs taken out for ritual purposes.

Mike’s fear was confirmed when he and Mohammed were ordered to take off their clothes, they obeyed and stripped themselves off. They were led into a small clearing inside the forest with guns pointed at them. The shame of nakedness disappeared into the dark Saturday night.

They were ordered to lie face down and the gun men securely tied their hands to their backs, they also bound their feet and walked around them still speaking in coded slangs. One of the gun men told the others, “Let’s finish them off now”.

As Mike waited for the bullet or the machete cut, he thought about his wife, his family and his friends. He wondered why his Maker had decided that his star would dim so early and so shamefully. Mike continued to wait and prayed that the gun men should spare him the agony of waiting and do what they had to do. He wasn’t concerned anymore with the various insects feasting on his exposed body; he stilled his mind and continued to wait.

Suddenly there was quiet, Mike heard a car ignition turn on, followed by a second. The sounds were the sweetest melody he had ever heard in his life. Something told him that his abductors were about leaving. Mike heard the cars rev and drive off, but he still wasn’t sure if they left any guard behind. Mike felt that heaven had provided him and Mohammed with a window of opportunity. He lay still for a while and listened for human noise, but the million sounds of the forest inhabitants made any discernment impossible.

Mike decided to brave it; he exerted every strength left in him as he tried to wriggle out of his hand cuffs. After several attempts and bruises, he managed to secure his hands free. He then untied his feet and helped Mohammed out of his own shackles.

Naked, bruised, shaken and dying, Mike and Mohamed ran out of the forest to the motorway in search of help. None came. Mike thought he knew why, they were naked, and so he decided to go back to the spot where they had escaped from. Mohammed cautioned against it but Mike knew that the bigger risk was in standing naked on the motorway. He scurried for their clothes and found them strewn all over, partly torn and soaked in blood. They put them on but still no car would stop for two bruised and dirty looking men standing by the motorway outside Abuja city gate that late on a Saturday evening.

Help comes from unexpected places. Eche, one of the search party hastily raised by Sunny suddenly appeared. His remit was to cover the airport axis and to inform on - duty police road patrols of the incident. Eche picked Mohammed and Mike up, as Mike settled into Eche’s Toyota Starlet car, he passed out.

------------------------------ ------------------------------ ------------------------------ ------------------------------ ---

This is a true story. All the names in the story are real except Mike. Mike went on to have his book (The Long Harmattan Season) presentation as planned. The Nigerian Police have still not recovered Sunny’s Toyota Camry car and Mike’s valuables. The Mike in the story is me, the author.  A deep appreciation to friends, family and associates who have strengthened me through words of encouragement, prayers and material gifts. I am overwhelmed. My friends at nigeriavillagesquare.com, you guys are awesome.

info@uchenworah.com    August 2007

 


Comments Page: 1 2 3


posted on 08-02-2007, 22:49:43 PM
Oluye
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
This is grave!!!
Like you rightly said, they don't appear to be illiterates or even half literates. This is the direct result of corruption we now have a generation that has witnessed the display of opulence and lost faith in decent work as a means to make ends meet. May God help us all. Once again, congratulations.

posted on 08-02-2007, 22:51:59 PM
Big-k
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Uche,

Pictures do tell a thousand tales. Stay safe for the remainder of your trip.

Meanwhile, what did the police do? You may use your experience to highlight police inefficiency as well.

posted on 08-02-2007, 22:52:11 PM
Busanga
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Chei! Uche Ndo..pele. It is hard to look at..be strong

posted on 08-02-2007, 23:01:55 PM
Aringaranso
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Tufiakwa,

seemed like a journey to hell and back

But Nna, this is a clear testimony that you will not die untimely,

The Good Lord is not yet true with you,

I thanked the miraculous God for changing the mind of your ruthless captors.

And may he continue to protect you and your entire family in Jesus Name!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


The Villagers are solidly and unshakably behind you ----Azu-gi-di-alo!!!!!!

posted on 08-02-2007, 23:03:20 PM
Tonsoyo
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Waow! That was too close Uche (alias Mike)

I thank God for preserving your life. May God make that preservation your stepping stone to further greatness.

I have never been scared of driving in Lagos and Abuja anytime of the day or night. Now I am really afraid, I might have forever lost the confidence. That could have been me on one of my several trips to Naija.

posted on 08-02-2007, 23:09:06 PM
Zanderlex
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Wahooooo. This is beyond belief. May God help us.

posted on 08-02-2007, 23:28:45 PM
Tengallons
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Again, we thank the Lord for his mercies. Lessons are imbedded in events. May the Almighty give you (and us) the wherewithal to fathom the meaning of this moment and be strengthened by it. Experiences like this really push us to thinking about the fleeting nature of life and what's important and what's not. Ozoemena (May it not happen again.)

posted on 08-02-2007, 23:30:33 PM
Nigerian
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
This is a classic demonstration of the resilience of the brave spirit. Many would have called it quits and scampered back to the comforts of the west. You braved death and went ahead with your book launch. You are a brave dude. Don't ever let nobody tell you different.

posted on 08-02-2007, 23:40:50 PM
Chinkata
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
They say it is only the woman that you decide to love that can break your heart and cause you untold pain.

It is the risk that those of us who love Nigeria, may yet for that love be consumed by her.


Nna ndo and daalu!

posted on 08-03-2007, 00:50:24 AM
Igwe
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
What a story! And the happy ending. Many Nigerians have not been that lucky.

Uche, count your blessings, name them one by one. I'm sure this must be one of the greatest of your blessings.

The part about meeting a police check point was the most horrific.

This is wishing you all the best.

posted on 08-03-2007, 01:28:25 AM
Soul Sista
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Ucheekins:

Pele o. Even looking at the pictures alone sef is scary enough. Thank God for saving your life and Mohammed's.

Soul Sista a/k/a Soul Sizzling

posted on 08-03-2007, 01:41:42 AM
OsaroO
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Uche

I am still apprehended after looking at your picture above. It is very hard to think about this. Why they were so wicked to you and Mohamed this way?! Why they did not take the car and money without brutal means of punishment?! How can one think of this for God's sake?!!!

Uche, please stay strong. From the above comments, I see that you put God in charge of your life and your prayer was taken in God's wishes for your continuing life. I believe strongly that you will soon put it behind you, since God still need you for greater mission.

I am still in deep thought of you. I prayed and I'm still praying for you.

God will be with you always (Amen)

posted on 08-03-2007, 03:25:43 AM
SOC Okenwa
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Uche, big brother!

I thank God for your life; you see that's why whenever I travel back home be it in Lagos, Benin City or Ihiala I put my security squarely in God's hands. And whenever I'm back to base I celebrate with friends for my safety in and out of the big jungle we call Nigeria.

The difference between living in London and Abuja has once again been exposed. While security of lives and property is firmly under control in London the same cannot be said of Lagos and Abuja.

May the good Lord you called upon in your grave moment strenghten you and multiple your years on earth.

Aluta continua!

posted on 08-03-2007, 03:46:41 AM
Abdulmumin
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
What can I say Uche but to thanks God Almighty for your life.

This story of yours is the grim reality of life in everyday Nigeria. The culprits are never found or even sought for hence they go on to rob again and again. This is also reflective of our polity where thieving politicians get recycled again and again to outdo their past performances.

This is the tragedy of Nigeria.

posted on 08-03-2007, 04:09:55 AM
Philipikita
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
This is unbelievable!
Congratulations Uche (alias Mike) for having your life and that of Mohammed spared.
Please let's know the aftermath of the horrible event, especially the police 'response'.

posted on 08-03-2007, 04:29:34 AM
Ani
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Uche,

At times like these, i really Thank God for your life and that of your friends. Not many people come out of such encounters to recount the story. Kudos to you for going ahead with the book launch in spite of your loss. May God continually protect you. Amen

meanwhile, like say you wear manchester united jersey, dem for no do you anything

posted on 08-03-2007, 05:05:05 AM
Blondie
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Something similar to this happened to me before I left Nigeria. I had come down to the East from Abuja where I had been living. I had just attended evening mass at Assumpta Cathedral Owerri with my brother and two of my nephews. We then decided to go spend the night in my village, so we drove down in my Mercedes 190, a prized possession by any young Nigerian doctor's standard then. It was raining and we were manouvering the car through a very rough patch of road when an okada which had been trailing us rode beside us and two of its occupants wielding guns ordered us to stop. We could not make a run for it because the road was really a disgrace of a road. It was a typical road found in Eastern Nigeria. It had canyons rather what we call potholes littered all over the place. So I stopped. I had heard stories about these things so I remembered that I was not supposed to look at them since you could recognize them and of course that meant instant death. Luckily even my teenage nephews knew this rule of the jungle and they all kept their faces down.

"Where is the money?" the leader snarled.

Luckily I had 15,000naira in my pocket and my brother had 5000 naira too. We handed it to them, together with our mobile sets, without looking up. I was wondering how in God's name they knew that we had money with us. But people were to later tell me that it was a routine question that they ask when they accost their victims. Anyway they ordered us out of the car and forced us to lie face down on the mud in that rain. They zoomed off in my car and the rider of the okada, with the nerves of steel, turned back and rode away in the opposite direction like he had just done his own part of the deal. Other oncoming vehicles hastily turned back, not giving a hoot about us. When we summoned courage we stood up and ran all the way up to the nearest police station and reported the matter. We then took public transport back to Owerri. The next morning police came to my house and asked for me. They said that they had recovered my car. My luck was that I had written my sister's mobile number on a piece of paper and the police, who had discovered that piece of paper in the car, had called her in Lagos then and she had given them our address. Thank God that the police recovered the car where it was abandoned even though I had to part with 10,000 naira before they could release the car to me.
So Uche, sorry o! That is the sorry pass that we have come to as a country after so many years of pillaging by our leaders. Like they say in the Caribbean: "whaa yu go do?" It is your country. What are you going to do?

posted on 08-03-2007, 05:13:44 AM
Okenikpoto
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
My brother Uche,

When you told me of your ordeal, I never knew it was so gory and that I called you the next morning and you were already laughing about it made me calm down a bit. The reality dawned on me when I met you at Abuja, but it did not sink. Nwanne ndo o. At least we did the book presentation and the whole of NVS have seen it and I believe their prayers have been very continous.

Thank God for your survival.


But UChe, I now respect you more because even at the face of death, you wee a TRUE BLUE. I will make sure Jose Maurinho and Abramovich sees this picture; it deserves a place st the Chelsea Museum.

posted on 08-03-2007, 05:36:25 AM
THE VOICE
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Thank God for his mercies.

posted on 08-03-2007, 05:41:26 AM
Afeni
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
My friend, Uche, if those boys find out about your posts on NVS, you go hear wehn! It is best you save yourself the possibility of another beating and never mention them again.

On a different note, they bloodied you up pretty good. I hope they didn't cause any lasting damage. Get well soon!

posted on 08-03-2007, 05:47:03 AM
Calist
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Uche,

All Praises and adoration to the LORD for HIS goodness and mercies are marvellous in our sight.

It is indeed the LORD'S doing.

And as a lesson to us all, we must live our lives as if it were the end, daily.

Take care,

posted on 08-03-2007, 06:13:34 AM
Edoji
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
You have just experienced what Nigerians -both ordinary and not-so-ordinary - pass through everyday.

Thankfully, you lived to tell the tale.

May your days be elongatua!

posted on 08-03-2007, 07:06:33 AM
Crisdels
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Just like everyone else, I am saying WOW! What a story!

Then as I was clinging unto a feigned modesty, and not wanting to ruin everyone's devotion and sympathy to this one incident, I stumbled at another similar account .

Oh! well, I'm free now to tell a somewhat closer story.

It happened to me also. At Port Harcourt in 2004. On March 24, at about 11:30am. How can I forget such a date.

I arrived Nigeria via Abuja on March 21, 2004, and got to my destination which was Port Harcourt, on the next day. On March 24th, I was driven in my host's SUV to No. 4 Onne Street, GRA PH 2 - World Communications, to purchase a SIM Card to enable me make phone calls. While I waited for the transaction to complete, with my driver right next to me, - 2 men walked into the office, or maybe were already waiting there, and the next thing I heard was: "put your face down", "wait, ... stand up", "put your phone down" "...lie down". Suddenly it was a man waving a short gun, pointing it directly on my head, and the other man was digging into my pockets dispossessing me of all the dollars I brought with me to claim my goods containerized at Onne Port.

As I lay face down not hoping to see another day light, not really praying, 'cause all my hopes had left me, the next thing I heard was a clamour: " thief, thief, thief", and there was a sudden freedom sensation as my driver pushed on me and said, oga, let's go, let's go. They left on a waiting OKADA.

My brothers and sisters, as briefly stated, was how briefly and close to death I was. And the effect of that occurence still dogs my performance till this day.

We go through hail by different ways, grateful this brother, "Mike" came out alive also.

posted on 08-03-2007, 07:36:24 AM
Nero africanus
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
uche,

im glad everything turned out right in the end ,

today is the first day of the rest of your life

posted on 08-03-2007, 07:45:12 AM
Rudeboy
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
My brother, welcome from hell! Your chi is alive and your time is far from near. Now you have been baptised get ready for your mission on earth. More tribulations are on the way but let that not deter you, you are on the right route. Forget the pain, wipe the blood and move on! Congrats on your book presentation anywasy, heard it was a success!

posted on 08-03-2007, 07:56:14 AM
WaleAkin
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Thanksgiving Service in honour of our Brother, Mazi Uche Nworah at the Saint Bottles Cathedral, Edgware Road, London.

Tonight at 9PM Prompt!

Come one, Come all

posted on 08-03-2007, 08:34:00 AM
Neonaijansista
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
What a harrowing tale! It sounds almost surreal...I wept as I read the story.

We thank God for sparing your life, Mr Nworah. You were brave enough to go ahead with the book launch and overcome the trauma of the robbery. It shows a strength of character that is very rare. You won the battle with your assailants - they may have carted away your money and property, but they couldnt break your spirit. God bless you, and grant your strength to heal from the wounds, on the inside and outside.

So were these poor, unfortunate young men who decided to take their anger out on innocent men???! The callousness with which the head injury was inflicted says a lot about the intentions of the robbers. So, visiting your motherland has become an invitation to be robbed, assualted and even murdered?

God save Nigeria.

posted on 08-03-2007, 08:35:46 AM
Chidi Giniji
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Chineke-e! Just imagine what they did to this man-o! Yesterday five police men were gunned down by armed robbers in Lagos and Ibadan! Upstairs, ex-governors and erstwhile politicians have been robbing the nation blank! It doesn't matter where one turns to there is nothing, absolutely nothing encouraging for the common man or woman. In this 21 century, in a country like Nigeria where, almost every second citizen is a born again christian, human beings are still being butchered for ritual offerings. Amidst all these the nations zeitgeist is hoplessly befuddled. Nobody seems to be aware of the hideousely terminal disease that is creeping in the veins of that nation. Does anybody really believe that a nation with so much dearth in brotherly and sisterly love, not to mention simple respect for humanity, shall one day breed normal human beings who would behave like they ever suckled the breasts of a mother? Oh boy, shrug, shrug, no further comments.

posted on 08-03-2007, 08:56:22 AM
Bennie
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Uche,

Although I was in Abuja and saw you live after your ordeal with armed bandits, the photos are quite scary. Permit me to add my good wishes to the long list of well wishers. My husband had four words for me after I told him your story, "I told you so". He has a phobia for Nigeria after his own brother was attacked and left for dead two and a half years ago. He was in coma for a few weeks. But what should we do, those of us who cannot do without going home. We pray that even though we walk through the valley of death (Nigeria), we shall not fear because the Lord protects us with his rod and staff.

Thank God again for sparing your life. Keep the faith!

Bennie

posted on 08-03-2007, 08:59:12 AM
Nawaya
Re: Help Comes From Unexpected Places
Words fail me.... NIGERIA!!!!

Congrats Uche!!
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