Sometimes the internet asks questions that are less about facts and more about how people interpret proximity to power.
This week, Nigerian businessman Olakunle Churchill found himself responding to an old curiosity online after attending the 89th birthday celebration of former president Olusegun Obasanjo. A social media user suggested that the elder statesman might be his biological father. Churchill replied calmly in the comment section, saying something simple but layered: a father figure is not always the person who gave birth to you.
He explained that fatherhood can also come from mentorship, guidance, and influence — the uncle, family friend, or elder who shapes your direction in life. According to him, Obasanjo played that kind of role while he was growing up, even helping him gain admission to a military school in Abeokuta during his childhood.
But the moment reveals something deeper than a rumour being addressed.
In Nigeria — and across much of Africa — lineage has always been a powerful social language. People instinctively try to trace influence back to blood. If someone moves confidently around a powerful figure, the public mind often fills the gap with biology.
It is less about curiosity and more about how societies understand access.
Power, mentorship, and patronage often exist in blurred spaces. A young person mentored by a national figure may move through rooms most people never see. To outsiders, the easiest explanation becomes familial connection. Not mentorship. Not guidance. But blood.
Churchill’s comment quietly pushes against that instinct.
There is also something cultural happening in the background. Nigeria is a society where elders still hold enormous symbolic authority. When someone publicly calls an elder “father,” it can mean reverence, mentorship, protection, or lineage — sometimes all at once. The language itself carries layers.
And yet the internet prefers one interpretation: literal biology.
But perhaps the more interesting question sits elsewhere.
What does it say about a society when mentorship is so rare that people assume power relationships must be biological?
And what happens to a culture when the idea of “fatherhood” becomes defined only by DNA instead of influence?
Churchill’s response was not defensive. It was almost philosophical. A reminder that some relationships are built not by birth, but by direction.
The internet will keep speculating.
But the quieter conversation might be about the kind of guidance younger generations believe still exists — and who they believe is capable of offering it.
Because sometimes what people are really asking is not “Who is your father?”
It is “Who opened the door for you?”
And perhaps the deeper question lingers: in a society hungry for mentors, who is still willing to play that role?
If this thought stays with you longer than the headline, it has done its work.
Jaiyeorie — this is why it matters.
#JaiyeWhyItMatters
According to him, a father figure can also be an uncle, relative, or family friend who plays a significant role in raising, guiding, and mentoring someone while growing up.
He added that what truly matters is the role such a person plays in shaping one’s life and the respect earned through that influence.
Churchill further revealed that through Obasanjo’s influence, he attended a military school in Abeokuta where he spent much of his childhood.
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