Chief
Simon Odo also known as Onuwa, King Solomon of Africa or King of Satan was
however married to 68 women but some of them had earlier died. Augustina Odo
(nee Asogwa) and Virginia, nee Mogbo from Oraifite were among the dead ones.
The
sixty-nine years old herbalist, Chief Simon Odo, who married an eighteen year
old girl, Chidinma, as his 57th wife last November has said that he would not marry
again, having had a fair of women in his life. Chidinma was married from Okutu,
in Nsukka Local Government Area of Enugu State.
However,
Odo spoke in an interview with the South East Voice at his palatial home at
Aji, Enugu Ezike in Igboeze North Local Government Area of Enugu State.
Onuwa who
was armed with an Onward note book where names of his wives and over 200
children were listed according to their dates of birth said that his first son,
Emeka was born on December 15, 1969.
“I was
born in 1947 on the day they had an eclipse of the sun and the moon. There was
darkness in the afternoon on the day I was born. I was the only son of my
parents.
“I was
baptised as a Christian in the Catholic Church and I even became a mass servant
under Rev Father Desmond McGlade. I however became a herbalist because of
circumstances beyond my control. As I said, I was the only son of my parents
but because some of his relations wanted to take over his landed property, they
poisoned me. I contracted tuberculosis and had to be treated for years. At a
point, I was even unable to walk for about five years because I became lame.
“I ran to
Ondo State in the South West, where I trained to become a herbalist at the age
of 15, before returning to the village. I married 15 wives when my father was
alive and the situation prolonged his life. He died in 1992 at the ripe old age
of over 90 years. My first son has seven children and four grandchildren.
“Any of my
children who chooses to become a Christian is free to do so, provided he/she
must become a Catholic. I don’t like the Pentecostal churches.”
On feeding
of his large family, Onuwa said, “People think that I feed many of them but
this is not true. Most of my children are grown up. The boys among them usually
marry and go to their own houses just like the girls who marry and follow their
husbands to their places.”
However,
my wives cook food for the whole family in turns. For example, if it is the
turn of Ada or Omada to cook, she would invite five of her colleagues to assist
her in cooking. One woman cooks for everybody in the house at a time but my
other wives would always assist such a person.”
Asked if
any of his sons has taken after him as a herbalist, he said, “I will not
encourage them to do so. I don’t want my sons to take after me because some of
them will do bad things with my medicine. As a herbalist, I have never killed
anybody or thought of evil against anybody but I do not trust that my children
would be upright like me. That is why I will not encourage them to inherit my
medicine but I may bequeath them to some of my younger children, not the old,
greedy ones.”
Meanwhile,
it was learnt that although Onuwa abhorred seeing his children attend churches
other than the Catholic church, seven of them were ordained pastors at the
Lord’s Chosen Church. Hitherto, some of them attended Catholic and Anglican
churches while many of them took after their father in his business.
However,
the ordination of the pastors brought about a radical Christian awakening in
the extra-large family of Chief Odo.
In the
past four years, there had been a simmering misunderstanding between the
pastors and their father regarding his herbal practice. The pastors were said
to be mounting heavy pressure on him to repent and turn to Jesus, a demand the
herbalist spurned. Odo, said to have lost one of his wives last February, had
arranged for the burial programme, which his pastor’s sons rejected and rather
organized a prayer programme for her burial, triggering confusion in the
family.
Shameless man
ReplyDeleted man no get shame
ReplyDeleteThe man is too old for taking 18year old girl. he must have used chaim on d girl .
ReplyDelete