Wife
of President Goodluck Jonathan, Patience, narrated on Sunday in Abuja
how a debilitating sickness almost took her life at a time the Federal
Government was telling Nigerians that the President’s wife was in
perfect condition.
The President’s wife said she passed out for over seven days and
that her aides, believing that she was dead, were already selling her
personal effects before God “miraculously” brought her back to life.
Punctuating her testimony with praise songs, Patience, who refused to
read from a speech prepared for her, narrated to a congregation at a
thanksgiving service held at the Presidential Villa how she underwent
nine surgeries within one month in London at a time the Presidency was
assuring the citizens that she had merely travelled to rest after the
rigours of the 2011 elections and hosting the African First Ladies Summit.
At a reception later in the day, Jonathan said his wife’s “miraculous
healing” had put an end to the superstition about deaths in Aso Rock.
Jonathan’s wife said, “I remember when Chief (Olusegun) Obasanjo was the President of the country, I was close to his late wife, Stella. We worshipped together in this chapel.
“It was a painful moment for me that time when she died and her
corpse was brought here. That was how my corpse would have been brought
here. It was not an easy experience for me. I actually died; I passed
out for more than a week. My intestine and tummy were opened.
“I am not Lazarus but my experience was similar to his own. My doctors said all hope was lost.
“A black doctor in London who is with us in this service was flown in
when the situation became critical. It was God himself in His infinite
mercy that said I would return to Nigeria. God woke me up after seven
days.
“I know that some people somehow leaked
the information that I was dead. They are people that I trust and rely
on; to them, I was dead and I would never return to the country alive.
Some of them even sold my things off.
“I won’t say everything here. It is the Lord’s doing that I returned alive. When God says yes, nobody can say no.
“People are always afraid of operation (surgery) but in my own case,
while my travail lasted, I was begging for it (surgery) after the third
operation because I was going to the theatre every day.
“It was God who saw me through. I did eight or nine operations within one month. It was not an easy one.”
Curiously, the President’s wife did not reveal the nature of her
ailment but she admonished the citizens to stop playing politics with
sickness, saying nobody was immuned to ailments.
She said her experience taught her that there was nothing like a
First Lady and that she realised that she was “a common woman and my
name is simply Patience.”
Patience, joined by her husband and family members, later danced to the altar for a special thanksgiving with the song “This kind God, I have never seen Him before.”
Primate of the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion, Most Rev.
Nicholas Okoh, in his sermon titled, “The saving acts of God” at the
service recalled that many Nigerians and friends of the nation were
anxious about the health situation of Patience when she was abroad.
The cleric said while a lot of people uttered negative statements
about the situation, he said he was delighted that what the people said
was different from what God said.
He assured Patience that her healing was perfect and her ailment
would not relapse, saying it was a good thing that when God turns shame
to joy, there is need to rejoice and thank Him.
“You have been set free; the forces attacking you have been defeated.
God has released His authority and today, you are a winner,” he said.
At the reception, the President said, “The story was that one of us
(the President or his wife) will die. Today we are celebrating her.
“Her recovery has put an end to that belief. I am not too good in
celebrating, but for this particular one, I think we have to thank God
for keeping the life of my wife.
“If anything had happened, there would have been different stories.
Fake prophets would have given their stories. As mortals, we must fall
sick and die but how and when is what matters most.
“To die when serving your people is not good. Death should come after you have finished serving.”
The President recalled that when he was still a deputy governor in Bayelsa State, he lost a second cousin.
He said during the burial, a story was told how anybody in his
community who is gradually going into limelight always die mysteriously.
He said all eyes were focused on him, apparently insinuating that it was his time to die.
Jonathan said he prayed hard that he would not die young and God answered him.
Patience Jonathan left Nigeria unannounced in August last year and spent about seven weeks abroad.
Although her media aides claimed she was resting abroad after the
rigours of hosting the African First Ladies Summit, media report had it
that she was admitted at a German hospital during the period.
Throughout her period of absence, the Presidency kept mum on her state of health and the nature of her sickness.
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