Mercy Okafor, the mother of
four blind children is now paralysed, following complications that arose after
she had an injection.
The family of Christopher
Okafor Onanwa in Umuoba Akabor village, Mbaukwu, Awka South Local Government
Area, Anambra State have been in sorrow for the past forty-years.
Four out of the seven
children born in the family have been blind from their childhood.
Several years ago when
Mercy got married to her heartthrob, Christopher, hopes were high on how they
would live happily thereafter and raise kids that would in turn take care of
them in their old age.
The arrival of the first
child, Henry, a boy brought enormous joy to the family but trouble began soon
after the birth of the second child, Chidiebere, a girl, who had what seemed
then like a slight sight challenge and family attributed it to measles which
was rampant at the time.
Somebody advised that she
should be taken to the eye hospital in Kano. Frantically, the family ran to
that place for solution. But after all efforts, she went totally blind. It
was the same story for the 3rd born, Uchenna and two others Nkechinyere and
Kaodilichukwu.
“Greater part of my
motherhood has been spent on taking care of the blind children,” their mother
laments.
As Mrs. Okafor told Sunday
Sun, prior to the problem that afflicted her children, no member of their
family was born blind or had ever gone blind. This fact left her wondering
what could have caused the problem for her children. She is now a widow having lost
her husband in 2001.
Her voice quivering as she
struggled to stop herself from crying. She said:
“I had seven children,
namely, Henry, Chidiebere, Uchenna, Ekenedilichukwu, Nkechi, Ifeanyi and
Kaodilichukwu. While Henry, Ekene and Ifeanyi are free, the other four are
completely blind and we have suffered terribly for the past 40 years.
“While I was healthy, I was
the one running from pillar to post seeking for help on how to train and take
care of the children. But I started having my own health challenge after some
years until I was finally demobilised in 2012. Since then, I’ve been
permanently confined to the wheelchair and the bed where I eat, pass urine and
go to toilet.
“I was given an injection
in a hospital which I suspect had either expired or had serious reactions on my
system leading to paralysis of my two legs. I was at Amaku General Hospital,
Awka for two weeks before my transfer to Nnamdi Azikiwe University Teaching
Hospital, Nnewi, where I stayed for seven months, without recovering the use of
my legs. I suffered from bed sore with serious wounds and the hospital fixed a
urine bag and catheter on my system which I’ve carried since then. We tried all
we could for the blind children.”
In the quest to
rehabilitate the children, Mercy said the children were taken to Oji River,
Enugu State, through the assistance of public-spirited individuals, where they
were taught how to read and write. The family struggled to see two of them pass
out from secondary school while the other two dropped out.
“The last one,
Kaodilichukwu was in school when I broke down in sickness and that has been
where we are since then. My daughter, Ekene is the only eye in the family now.
She is the one who takes care of the five of us at home while her own future has
been mortgaged because of our condition,” she further lamented.
The only sighted lady in
the family, Ekene Okafor in a brief chat with Sunday Sun corroborated her mom’s
earlier assertion that the problem of her brother and three sisters has put her
in complete servitude.
“Taking care of four blind
people and a bedridden mother is not easy. I used to be a petty trader but
when my mother broke down, I had to close the shop. The first son of my family
was involved in a ghastly road accident that nearly crippled him and in the
process of treatment he lost all his fortune too. Sometimes I ask God questions
but I know that our Redeemer lives,” she said.
Adding their voice on the
need for public spirited individuals and corporate bodies to assist the family
in their predicament, the immediate past President General of Mbaukwu Town
Union, Chief Omife. I. Omife and Chairman, Old Akabor Village Union, Sir
Nwankwo Samuel told Sunday Sun that the problem of the Okafor family has been
a long standing one that some grown up youths today in the village met the
situation when they were born.
They noted that the family
members are good people who don’t indulge in anything evil and never had
issues with their neighbours or the community. They also disclosed that as
community leaders, they have tried at their own level to assist the family by
scouting for helpers on their behalf but the efforts can never be enough.
Those touched by the plight
of the family and are moved to lend a helping hand can reach the family through
Ekene Okafor on 07032150785 and or make monetary donation through the account
of Jacintha Okafor (UBA account number 2077200008).
Sun

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