For those who grew up in Oguta, in Imo State a few years before the
Civil War, the name “Aguduma” would bring back memories. It was the
qualification of a young boy, whose friends considered too handsome and
therefore, nicknamed him “Aguduma,” meaning “Handsome Goodluck.”
That
boy, today, has become a man. He’s not an ordinary man, but one, who
has risen from, perhaps, a nobody to the pinnacle of Nigeria’s
leadership. That boy is today the president of Nigeria. That boy is
President Goodluck Jonathan.
Yes, President Jonathan once lived
in Oguta. While there, before the war, he attended St. Paul’s Anglican
Church Primary School. He was nicknamed ‘Aguduma” by his peers in
primary school.
Telling Daily Sun the story of Jonathan, as a boy
growing up in Oguta, Madam Emilia Ajie, from Ogbaru area of Anambra
State, revealed that the president lived with his uncle, popularly
called Chief and his son in their (Madam Emilia) compound at the
Kalabari Beach, in Oguta 11. According to the septuagenarian, Jonathan
was always ill-treated by his uncle, who never bought him school books,
sandals or other things he needed for school. She revealed that Jonathan
was always the last, among the pupils who lived in the compound, to go
to school daily because of house chores he must complete every morning.
Madam Emilia further revealed that President Jonathan has always been a
quite and respectful person, who, even in the face of hardship inflicted
on him by his uncle, refused to accept unsolicited gifts from people.
She revealed that even when his uncle left him behind for home, the
young Jonathan engaged himself in menial jobs to survive.
According
to her, “Goodluck is a very quite and respectful person, even in the
face of hardship inflicted on him by his uncle, who was popularly called
Chief and we always felt sorry for him because of the way his uncle was
treating him. They were then living in our boys’ quarters. His uncle’s
son usually did nothing. It was Goodluck, who did everything in the
house, including cooking.” Madam Emilia recalled that at the end of the
civil war, in 1970, President Jonathan’s uncle, who she said had married
an Izombe woman, left him and his son, who were yet to finish their
primary school education at St. Paul’s Anglican Church Primary School,
Kalabari Beach, Oguta 11, behind and promised to come back for them. She
stated that the uncle later sent for his son, while the young Jonathan
was left behind in Oguta to fend for himself. “When Chief, Goodluck’s
uncle, left with his wife, who was from Izombe, for their hometown, he
had left behind his son and Goodluck because they were still in school
and had promised to come back for them. But after his son finished his
primary school, Chief sent for him and left Goodluck behind,” she said.
She
revealed how Jonathan once had an accident that frightened everybody.
According to her, “one days, while Goodluck was still living in our
compound, he had gone to pluck mango with other young boys, but fell
from the tree and as I was returning from the market I heard children
shouting that ‘Aguduma’ had fallen off the mango tree and I quickly
rushed to scene and used my head-tie to bind his fractured right hand.
“My husband’s brother, popularly known as Ajasco, who was returning from
the farm, had carried him (Jonathan), with the assistance of other
children and took him to a popular traditional bonesetter in the
neigbourhood, called Nwanyiogu from Mgidi but married to Kalabari man.
And while he was receiving treatment for his injured hand, we were
always bringing him food because both his uncle and the son had gone
back to their hometown.” Madam Emilia pointed out that since Jonathan
left Oguta in 1972 she has not set eyes on him again nor heard anything
about him. She revealed that she only got to know that Jonathan had
become the president of Nigeria when she saw, in 2011 an Almanac bearing
his photograph and had exclaimed: “Look at Goodluck!”
She stated
that as she shouted, the man who was selling the almanac asked what
happened. On telling him that she knew Jonathan, she said, the man told
her that Goodluck was the president of Nigeria. Waxing philosophical,
she said: “Whatever God has destined for anybody must come to past
because nobody will ever have thought that Goodluck will, one day become
the president of Nigeria. I thank God for his life because he really
suffered under his uncle and most times I had asked him then if his
parents were alive and he always said yes, but through out his stay in
our compound, his parents never visited him.” Also, talking about his
experiences with Jonathan, Patrick Ajie, Madam Emilia’s son, who is now a
staff of the Imo State Fire Service, recalled how the president and his
uncle and son lived in their boys’ quarters at Kalabari Beach in Oguta
11.
He said that when President Jonathan arrived Oguta with his
uncle, he started at Primary Four, at the St. Paul’s Anglican Church
Primary School, which was established by the Kalabari people in Oguta
11. He revealed that Jonathan finished his Primary Six in the school.
Ajie corroborated his mother’s story that even after Jonathan’s uncle
invited his son home, to join him and wife, President Jonathan continued
to live with them.
On how Jonathan left Oguta, he stated that
they did not see him for about two days, at that time, and therefore
made inquiry from some Ijaw, who told them that he had gone to Egbema in
search of one of his relatives. According to him, that was the last
they heard of him until they heard about his emergence as president.
“President Goodluck Jonathan had lived with his uncle and his son, who
was younger, in my father’s compound at Kalabari Beach in Oguta. We
occupied the main building, while they lived in the ‘Boys Quarters’. It
was from there that he completed his primary school at St. Paul’s
Anglican Church Primary School and he had started at From Four. Of
course, he was my senior in the same school. Even his uncle returned to
their hometown, with his new wife from Izombe and left behind Goodluck
and his son. He had promised to come for them when they were through
with their primary school education. But later his uncle sent somebody
to bring his son back to their home town and left Goodluck behind with
us.” Ajie said Jonathan later left between 1972 and 1973, first to
Egbema, in search of one of relatives and finally to his village.
On
whether he had ever met Jonathan, since he became president, Ajie said
no, as nobody has allowed him into the presidential villa of the
president’s Otuoke home. Said he: “I have tried severally to see him. I
had even gone to Bayelsa and Abuja, but my all efforts have proved
abortive. I wanted to see him at least to rekindled old times because we
had a very good relationship with him while he and his uncle were
living in our compound.”
Asked if he though Jonathan would
recognize him in a crowd, as they parted ways as young people, he stated
that he was not sure, but added that the president would never forget
that he ever lived in the compound of the Ajies in Kalahari Beach, in
Oguta.
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