Tag: Father’s Day

  • “I am proud of the dual role I play ” – Tonto Dikeh celebrates herself on Father’s day

    “I am proud of the dual role I play ” – Tonto Dikeh celebrates herself on Father’s day

    Controversial Nigerian actress, Tonto Dikeh has celebrated herself and women who take on the role of a father in their children’s life on Father’s Day.

    The single mother of one, via her Instagram page to share new photos as she wished herself, a happy Father’s Day.

    Tonto, who expressed how proud she is for the dual role she plays in her family,  stated that she is celebrating the strength, love and dedication she brings.

    The actress cum politician cheered herself and all the amazing mën and women making a difference. She further expressed gratitude to God for the resources, blessings, good health and love.

    She wrote: “Happy Father’s Day to me! Celebrating the strength, love, and dedication I bring to my family each day. I’m proud of the dual role I play and the endless love I give. Here’s to me and all the amazing women and mën making a difference!

    “Grateful to God for resources, blessings, good health, and love..

    MAMADEPAPA”.

  • Belated happy Father’s Day to real fathers – By Francis Ewherido

    Belated happy Father’s Day to real fathers – By Francis Ewherido

    Last Sunday was Father’s Day. It is belated, but well-wishes can never be late. So, Happy Father’s Day. I read some comments on social media where some people were complaining about the qualifying of some Happy Father’s Day posts with Adjectives like “real” and “good.” Why are they complaining? Who is a father? Is it just a man who impregnated a woman? So because a woman carried a pregnancy, she is a mother? Did the baby suck her breasts? After abandoning him/her at birth, she comes 25 years later to claim she is the mother? I beg clear road make I pass. Fatherhood goes with concomitant responsibilities?

    Real or good fathers need all the best wishes in the world. It is not easy to be a good father in today’s challenging world. Fatherhood goes with continuous and enormous responsibilities. Please allow me to borrow from my lecture notes. One, the father is the leader of his household. To be an effective leader, there are three domains of leadership in which every father must play. They are the ability to lead self, the ability to lead others (wife and children individually) and the ability to lead the family as a unit. Self-leadership, to a great extent, determines your success in the other domains of leadership. Self-leadership involves a deep knowledge of self, a set of morally high values that define who you are, self-control and a commitment to the cause of the family (Willie Petersen). A good father (leader) leads by example, not “do as I as say, but do as I do.” A father walks his talk, he puts his mouth where his money is.

    Also, a father is a teacher. A teacher is someone who imparts knowledge. A father is a teacher, who helps his children to acquire knowledge, competence and virtues. In addition, a father is a mentor to his children. A mentor is a person who gives a younger or less experienced person guidance and advice over a period of time. Teaching is imparting knowledge, mentorship is also imparting knowledge, but with a view to counsel. Every father should be a mentor to his children.

    Bonding is an important part of fatherhood. Every father should intentionally bond with his children to help build a united family. Families bond when they eat together, but there is a shift in paradigm. These days, many families do not often eat together at the table because this “indomie generation” has a different diet from their parents. Also, families scarcely watch television together these days because everyone has a laptop or smartphone. But thankfully many families have WhatsApp groups where the whole family, home and abroad, connect. There is also zoom family meetings. You have to adjust or your family bond will suffer.

    Related to bonding is friendship with your children. It is very difficult to be in your children’s lives without being friends with them. Some fathers have challenges being friends and also enforcing discipline. There is no issue at all. When lions are in protected reserves they are taught early to avoid snakes because poisonous snakes kill lions. To do that, they attach a snake-like object to an electric source and simulate snake movement. When the lion attacks the snake-like object, the power source is switched on. The electric shock sends the lion scampering for safety. That way lions learn early in games reserves to avoid snakes. Leadership of your family includes enforcing discipline in the house. Set your boundaries early and let your friendship with your children stay within these boundaries.  Friendship is important for you to get into their world to know their pleasures and displeasures, likes and dislikes, joys and pains, decisions and indecisions; agonies and other challenges they face. Armed with the knowledge of their world, you can play your role of a friend, teacher and mentor better. Let us stop here.

    As said at the beginning, I got to know of this year’s Father’s Day late. Sometimes I forget important dates. I was with my doctor in 2021 when he fixed my next appointment for 9th of March. I had agreed when my wife said “that will not be possible.” I was angry that she overruled me until she spoke again. “That day is his birthday.” That birthday was very important because I really needed to thank God for sparing my life after a very difficult period.

    Happily, my wife remembered Father’s Day and fervently prayed for me. It meant a lot to me. She always remembers important dates and buys me gifts. But there was no gift this year and I am not complaining o! I have no right to complain. Apart from forgetting important dates, I am not a habitual gift buyer, so what right have I to complain?  It is a terrible trait that I am ashamed of. Or is it because I am not romantic? I have never bought flowers for her, except the bouquet of flowers during our wedding. Before marriage, I never bought any girl flowers, not even on Valentine’s Day. It is not for lack of awareness. Giving flowers is alien to me.

    A few years ago, a woman complained to me that her husband is unromantic during our counselling session. I was upfront with her that I am even guiltier. But I admonished her husband not copy my bad behaviour. He should be romantic. He has money, so he should spoil his wife with gifts, take her out on candlelight dinners and take her on romantic vacations. I scarcely travel without my wife. That is just natural to me, but are those trips within and outside Nigeria romantic vacations? My wife is in a better position to answer that question, but I just love being with her.

    During my 40th birthday celebration long ago, I publicly confessed that I am very unromantic. My mischievous friend challenged my wife on how she could agree with me that I am unromantic when she was heavily pregnant with our youngest son. Ability to impregnate your wife is not the same with being romantic. I know what being romantic is, that is why I know that I am not romantic. After my session with the young couple, I decided that I must practice what I counsel (romance). After a few trials, what happened to David when Saul kitted him with coat of armour and a bronze helmet on his head to fight Goliath happened to me; I was not real.  Like David I now rely on my sling and smooth stones: caring. It has helped to keep my marriage going for over 24 years now. I take consolation that I am caring, though I am not romantic.

    But to other husbands, there is no harm in being romantic and caring at the same time. To Urhobo men and some other Niger Delta men whose ethnicity I don’t want to mention, help to puncture that stereotype that we are not romantic. Don’t allow few bad apples like me mess up the entire basket.

    Finally, a father must love his wife. It is not only a biblical injunction, it teaches your sons how to be loving husbands in future.

  • Davido expresses pain as the world celebrates Father’s day

    Davido expresses pain as the world celebrates Father’s day

    Nigerian ace singer David Adeleke, popularly known as Davido, has revealed that this Father’s Day is a difficult one for him.

    Davido in series of emotional posts via his verified Instagram story, noted that he has tears in his eyes today while the rest of the world marks Father’s Day.

    “Difficult Father’s Day for me… But thank God for strength. Some days will be like this. Water full my eyes but I’ll be alright! Forever!”(sic)

    “Difficult Father’s Day for me…. But I thank God for strength.”

    He went further to say “Some days will be like this.”

    The singer lost his son Ifeanyi whom he had with Chioma late last year in a drowning accident in his mansion.

    This is the first Father’s Day the singer has celebrated without the presence of Ifeanyi and while the he tried to remain happy.

     

     

  • On Father’s Day – By Hope Eghagha

    On Father’s Day – By Hope Eghagha

    The whole world said June Sunday the 19th was Father’s Day, and different emojis flew into my social media space from biological and non-biological wards, from students I taught twenty, thirty years ago, from social media ‘off-springs. ‘Thanks for all that you have been to me’, one wrote. There was sour grape too. One father observed: which one is this again, bringing me more expenses? It’s Father’s Day I will still be the one to take them out, just as I did on Mother’s Day and Children’s Day! Hahahaha!

    I didn’t grow up with the tradition of observing Father’s or Mother’s Day. Father was father, papa really. And Mother was mama, you know. Duty. Social responsibility. Provision of everything. Meeting all our needs from a modest civil servant’s income. It was a given. It was part of me, of us. The man in the house called the shots in a firm way, but also ensured that we were comfortable within his means. What he could not afford now, he promised to get us later. And he did. Somehow, we knew our limits. We never asked for the moon. From deed and action, Papa taught us how to be a father, a dad, a friend. Friend? That came later, that is, after A ’Levels success and he bought me a beer at 18! I was dizzy after a glass. But a beer from Papa would not harm me, the same man who never spared the rod if I as much broke any of the rules of engagement like going to play football without permission! But all of this prepared me for fatherhood! To be a father by example…

    I was 27 when I became a father. And a dad. That early morning in the hospital when I bore my tall thin baby girl in my arms, I stared at her for hours, wondering abut the beauty of a human being that had come out of my loins, my very first, (beginning of my strength’, the bible says) how the experience would change my life, how I would always have to reckon with three persons thenceforth, how I would have to ensure that she was fed regularly no matter how expensive baby formula was and how I would care for her no matter the circumstances. I had always wanted a girl, having come from an immediate family of seven boys and two girls, one five years older and the other six years younger, and how that deprived me of a close relationship with a girl at home. Odd, isn’t it? But that was it.

    I also peered into the future, what I would do, what I wouldn’t do, what direction I would give, religious, philosophical, spiritual, moral, and perhaps political. Sound education was a given. To pay fees for her through school without seeking support from my wife a given. But I did not foresee the world which she came into later as things began to tumble, as salaries were delayed, or withheld when ASUU was on strike, when our Take Home Pay could Not Take us Home, when inflation hit the roof, when the purchasing power of the naira took a terrible nose dive, or when herdsmen came into the narrative, when I ordered her to return home to Nigeria from the UK after an MSc to be able to meet a spouse and marry, how I changed my mind and asked my children to live anywhere in the world after my abductors threatened to kidnap my kids so I would be released from their custody to look for ransom money to free myself! That was not part of my vision!

    Fatherhood was trying. Stressful sometimes. Did you worry about school fees sometimes? About what they would wear? About taking them to and bring them back from school, supervising homework, organizing private coaching, preparing them for entrance into secondary school and later JAMB examinations? And they passed the examinations. There was happiness. Sense of achievement. Accomplishment. So, fatherhood was joyful too. How could, how should a father from a conservative home handle ‘tabooed sexuality subjects’ with a child of the modern age? It was a tough question! Push some to the mother? Allow her to discover some?

    So, it was that as I journeyed through the walls of education as a teacher, I encountered many students who made me a father, boys and girls who said daddy was absent in their lives, they didn’t know what it was like to have a father, how to bring a child into the world was not everything, how to provide material things was not fatherhood, how being an aggressive male in the house destroyed anything about fatherhood. And in a Creative Writing class, I asked my students to describe their relationship with their father and one of them broke down inconsolably as others wrote, and how she said the only thing about her father she knew was his photograph because he died when she was two or three. Or was it before she was born? I don’t remember now. But there were no dry eyes in the class of twenty-five that day when her experience of a no-dad hit the class, especially those who had taken presence of fatherhood for granted.

    There were others too who said once a second wife came into the picture, they ‘lost’ their father to the charms of Mrs. New Wife! How he didn’t bother anymore about the details of their lives. Children of ‘Baby mamas’, who grew up with dad never visiting the child’s school. Love child with no open love for the child. What about the one who grew up in Yorubaland with a Yoruba mother, and who thought his dad was Yoruba, who spoke Yoruba, who was told that his father died when he was a baby, how he once attended a party with his mom and a cousin to his mom cornered and told him his father was from Imo State, and he was alive somewhere in Port Harcourt and before she could complete the story, his mother burst in on them and almost had a fight with the woman, how she warned him never to go to that woman in his life. Pained, as a final year student, what would he say was his home state when he went into politics, what would he tell his children, why did his mother blank out his father, why the bitterness? Questions. Questions! Questions!

    Fatherhood and Father’s Day. Much later all the other kids came, and I learnt how to deal with each of them individually, separately, and together. They all came in their different ways, character, brilliance, attitude, food choices, choice of academic career, even marriage choices. So, as I was fathering kids, having eat-outs, having family dinner to encourage bonding, I was also a student of parenting too, learning things Papa never taught me, making mistakes even while correcting them, learning lessons which no book or teacher or guardian taught me. Leant that it was better to allow them blossom while you guided them into self-discovery and if they trusted you enough, everyday will be FATHER’S DAY in their lives, they would remember you positively and reciprocate proper fatherhood with good ‘children-hood! And of course, we soon moved to another level- that of a grandfather, welcoming a second generation of my own brood, male and female, a blessing which money cannot buy! Lessons learnt while grooming their parents may no longer be applicable while relating with your children’s children. It’s a new world, where a five-year old could put me through the intricacies of an android phone! Marveling about it all is part of the pride of being a father and a grandfather.

    So, let everyday be a day for fathers, for mothers, and for the children. So, when your son writes: ‘I’ve never really been a fan of Father’s and Mother’s Day because for me I believe my parents are special and I thank God for having you every day. I thank God because I was blessed to be able to grow up, stroll to the sitting room and have someone sitting there who I could ask any questions and from whom I could get wise answers’, one feels fulfilled. And let the spirit of love, parental, sibling, filial, govern the world. Perhaps if we had that consciousness, there would be less tension in the world!

     

     

    Professor Hope O. Eghagha (BA, Jos; MA; PhD, Lagos) MNAL

    Department of English

    Faculty of Arts

    University of Lagos

    Akoka Lagos

    NIGERIA

  • How Chioma Rowland celebrated Davido on Father’s Day

    Celebrity chef, Chioma Avril Rowland, has celebrate Father’s Day, with the father of her son, David Adeleke, better known as Davido, by dropping a piece of her mind.

     

    As the world celebrates Fathers all around the globe today, 19th June, the mother of one took to her Instagram story to shower accolades on the famous Afrobeat singer.

     

    Sharing a video of Davido and their son, Ifeanyi Jnr, having a father and son moment, Chioma penned a short note in appreciation.

     

    “Happy Father’s Day daddy, Davido. God bless you for us,” she wrote.

    Chioma

     

    The chef, whose full name is Chioma Avril Rowland is a Nigerian media personality and a seasoned chef who became popular by virtue of her relationship with Davido.

     

    She was born on April 1, 1995, in Owerri, in the Imo State, of Nigeria and grew up with her two other sisters.

    Chioma

     

    Chioma’s sisters are Jennifer Rowland and Ifunanya Rowland. The two are also doing well for themselves.

     

    The real name of Chioma’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Rowland.

     

    Her father’s full name is Avril Rostand. She has used both her father’s names throughout her life and it seems to be going well for her.

     

    The chef is also a media personality and became a topic for discussion among individuals and groups hence making her famous for her relationship with Davido.

     

    Chioma was born on April 1, 1995, in Owerri, in the Imo State, of Nigeria. Being one of three girls, she has lived in a happy home with her sisters. Chioma Avril Rowland’s sisters are Jennifer and Ifunanya.

     

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) recalls that Davido had earlier opened up on his intention to marry the chef.

     

    In a video that surfaced online, the “Assurance” crooner is heard telling friends about his decision to marry Chioma.

     

    However, Davido’s intention to marry Chioma, till date, is yet to be married by the singer.

  • Father’s Day: Anglican Primate charges men to get their PVCs

    Father’s Day: Anglican Primate charges men to get their PVCs

    Ahead of the 2023 general elections, the Primate of All Nigeria (Anglican Communion), Most Revd. Henry Ndukuba has charged men in Nigeria to get their permanent voter’s cards (PVCs).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Archbishop Ndukuba, who is also the Bishop of Abuja Diocese, made this known in his goodwill message to mark 2022 Father’s Day celebrations.

    Ndukuba also charged men to mobilize their family members to get their PVCs as well, stressing that all men in the country must determine to be involved in voting credible leaders into power come 2023.

    Ndukuba stated: “The activities leading on to the 2023 General Elections are on now. We have the opportunity to change the narrative of our Nation. We encourage all men to obtain their Voters Card, mobilize their families to do the same.

    “All men must determine to be involved in Voting credible leaders into power come 2023. The next regime must serve to salvage our Nation from the brinks of becoming a failed State. The opportunity for a peaceful change in Political leadership is now. Every man and father must exercise his civic right”.

    The Anglican Primate in the goodwill message also stated that God’s desire is for men to be fathers whose lives and actions will command their household after Christlikeness.

    The goodwill message reads in part: “We give thanks to God for His Fatherhood over us and the gift of fathers in the Househol of God and the Family. We appreciate the labours and contributions of all our men and fathers in supporting the work and ministry of the Church.

    “We congratulate all our Fathers on this year’s Fathers’ Sunday, our prayer is that the Lord will bless you all with the righteous man’s reward as you continue to serve God, knowing that we are His workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which the Lord has foreordained for us. (Ephes. 2:10)

    “Fathers are Covenant Connectors, Priest of their homes, Burden bearers, God’s Representative, Progenitors, Seed and Vision carriers. Fathers are pivotal to God’s plans for every generation. May the Lord enable all our men and fathers by His grace to fulfil their purpose and calling in life as Fathers.

    “In Genesis 18: 16-19.Abraham our father in faith, was visited by the Lord in the midst of a prevailing wickedness and sexual perversion as it is today.

    “But God found in Abraham a man and a father He could trust, partner and work with for the accomplishment of His divine purpose for their generation.

    “God is still looking for such a man and father in our generation, will God find you as such? In verse 19. God said. “For I have known him, in order that he may command his children and his household after him, that they keep the way of the LORD, to do righteousness and justice, that the LORD may bring to Abraham what He has spoken to him.”

    “God affirmatively attested to Abraham’s obedience and godly leadership over his family, as a type of faithful and godly father that leads by example. As we celebrate this year’s Fathers Sunday, God’s desire that we will be fathers whose lives and actions will command our household after Christlikeness.

    “One implication of the text, is that only Fathers who keep the way of the Lord that will see and enjoy the fulfilment of what God has promised. We are in very precarious and perilous times. This is also God’s own opportune time. We therefore, admonish all our men to be vigilant and pay close attention to their Health, their Family, Environment and Social Associations.

    “We must remain faithful to the Lord in all things. Be watchful and be prayerful, and seek not yet repose. Again, we congratulate all members of the Christian Men’s Fellowship, our dear men and fathers, the LORD will preserve you to celebrate many more Fathers Sunday. The LORD be with You”.

  • Requiems for Dads as Widows Adjust, Enjoy – Michael West

    Requiems for Dads as Widows Adjust, Enjoy – Michael West

    By Michael West
    June 25, 2021

    Last Sunday’s celebration of Father’s Day, to every man, was a reminder of the stark reality of emptiness and vanity of life. In appreciating and celebrating responsible fathers, many people, men in particular, took to their social media platforms to write or share posts that depicted the mood of men in sober reflection on their lives, their labour and why they die rather “early” comparatively.

    They live and toil for the survival of their families, provide for the needs of their dependants and be there for their loved ones, friends and the society, but not many care about them. More often than not, they labour for others to enjoy by bequeathing valuable and sustainable inheritance to their survivors when they transit into eternity. They deny and deprive themselves of earthly comfort. Their quest to secure the future for their people is paramount to them. Unfortunately, too, men involved in financial crimes do it mostly to secure the future for their beneficiaries. As evil as greed is, men indulge in it more for their people than for themselves. They undertake all manner of risks to ensure comfort for their families. A man’s life is cared for only when he’s sick and helplessly becoming invalid.

    A 71-year-old man narrated how he lost faith in his wife of 42 years. Sharing his experience at a hangout with a group of six elderly men last Sunday, the visibly agile, well dressed man said “It was then that I appreciated the submission of King Solomon who said women are more ‘bitter than death.’ That experience will follow me to the grave.”

    A happy, jolly and jovial character, the man revealed that he had a serious prostate issue that threatened his health greatly at the time. Meanwhile, three of his friends and associates had died as a result of complications from prostate ailments. “My condition was becoming malignant and I was almost resigning to fate, awaiting the ultimate end when I saw online chats my wife had with our daughter in her phone. After reading the chats, I broke down for almost a week, thinking. It made me to realise that life itself is a facade.

    “The chats stirred a fighting spirit within me. I resolved to fight on, not giving up to until my last breath. I started spending heavily on my health and intensified prayers for God’s healing. My major prayer point was that if indeed God is a Healer, if indeed God answers prayers and if indeed God cancelled death sentence over King Hezekiah, He should mercifully do the same for me. I was consistent in my prayers indoor throughout. I couldn’t fast because of medications but I resolved to live. God did answer my prayers, He healed me divinely and medically. Consequently, He extended my life till date. It is about five years now and I’m still alive, kicking.

    “Humanly speaking, the chats about my “imminent transition” as they put it was actually a possibility in view of my condition at the time. That’s why I didn’t hold anything against them but it stirred an urge for fervent prayers and absolute trust in God for the near impossible to happen in my life. Today, I’m a better believer and a prayer champion. Howbeit, they (wife and daughter) were elated that I made it. We did a low-key thanksgiving and hosted some close friends but as I speak, I didn’t tell them how the miracle started and perfected. It is only God that can do it and he did it.

    “Since that day, I have been spending more money on myself. I feed well, wear quality materials and accessories, buy the best of anything I desire and reach out to whoever I can help. I increased my workers’ salaries, refused to increase my rent for five years running. I support mission work and offer scholarship to some children of indigent parents. I stopped building more houses. I modified my Will and my lifestyle. I now attend events, socialise and watch football matches wherever I am. I turned a new lease of life because the annual Father’s Day is a scam. It should make men rather think deeply and reflect on their journey home.

    “Have you wondered why we have widows all over the place and scanty widowers? Some years ago, an officiating priest during his sermon at a funeral service asked widows to stand up, almost one-third of the women at the service stood up. They were well dressed and looking charming. But when he asked widowers to stand up, only three men stood up. The men were in their 70s while the widows were still bubbling, looking exquisite and active. They should be within the age bracket of 45 to 60/65 years. Most of them were in their 50s I guess. Such is undeserved portion of hardworking and responsible men who died labouring for others to reap.

    “Men wear out fast. We get weaker because of labour, responsibilities and emotional burden. Unfortunately though, women are waiting in the wings to mourn for a while, adjust to the new reality and begin to enjoy the fruits of their late husbands’ labour.”

    To every caring, loving and sacrificing father, please take a good care of yourself. Enjoy and merry from your legitimate income. Don’t joke with your health. May God reward men with sound health, longevity and peace. Men are sacrificial lambs for their families. Women naturally believe it is their portion to survive their husbands in order to “continue from where their men stopped.”

    A Thought for Widows

    During the week, precisely Wednesday, the annual International Widows’ Day was marked globally. The event holds June 23 every year. The day offered an opportunity to have a thought for widows both young and old. Besides money and property inherited by the fortunate ones or abject poverty many widows experience, missing their husbands is a great loss. It is possible that many of the homes were acrimonious when the men were alive but their absence make a whole lot of negative difference. Let’s not talk about those who were rightly or wrongly suspected in the death of their husbands, God is the ultimate Judge in every human case. Still, reach out to them if you can. Support them if you have the means. Refrain from hurting widows. If you date a widow, deal with her with understanding, patience and compassion. Never cause a widow to shed tears due to your action or inaction. Don’t neglect them, James 1: 27 says visiting widows and orphans in their situations is an acceptable service to God. Do not condemn widows for doing anything out of sheer helplessness. The Word says God is the husband, defender and the Judge of widows, not any man. However, widows, too, should give room for love in their lives. Fill the void with friendship and companionship as loneliness kills slowly. Who knows? The relationship may actually be the beginning of a new life. May God comfort the widows. Amen.

    From the Mailbox
    Re: Polygamy, My Only Option

    My father was a fantastic polygamist. None of his wives can separate us (the children). We were so knitted in love and unity. Three wives were involved. No wife ever yelled at or insult the other throughout my father’s lifetime. Whoever cooked first served all the children. My father was a superb manager of women and children, fully in charge. As the first child, he groomed me to coordinate all the children as one. I have trained four graduates from different mothers without qualms. There’s no big deal about polygamy, it depends on the capacity and capability of the husband to manage his home. To me, polygamy has its advantages as monogamy has its own disadvantages. – Bode Ojajuni, Lagos.

    Quote:
    “Unfortunately though, women are waiting in the wings to mourn for a while, adjust to the new reality and begin to enjoy the fruits of their late husbands’ labour.”

  • Mercy Aigbe, ex-husband slam each other over Father’s Day post

    Mercy Aigbe, ex-husband slam each other over Father’s Day post

    Lanre Gentry, estranged husband to Mercy Aigbe has reacted to a Father’s Day post by the actress on her Instagram page.

    Mercy Aigbe had in her post wished herself a happy Father’s Day, saying she plays the dual role in the lives of her kids while throwing a shade at Lanre Gentry.

    Her post read, “Happy Father’s Day to me and all the responsible fathers out there! 2 Kids ( 1 international student) changing naira to dollars with this dollar rate! Please it’s not easy but God has been gracious.

    “Please no one should come and tell me how I shouldn’t take the shine off Fathers oh! (Fatherhood is beyond just impregnating a woman, if you are a man and you do not perform your responsibilities towards your kids, Biko you ain’t fit to be called a Father and that’s period! So, Since I am playing the dual role in my children’s lives, allow me celebrate myself everyday! Because it’s not easy!

    This got a reaction from Gentry who took to his Instagram page denying that he’s a ‘deadbeat’ father.

    According to him, he is a father and has been responsible to his kids.

    He wrote, “If you like take your children to the moon, it’s nobody’s business. If you like, pay in dollar or yen , it’s nobody’s palava. I have helped you pay for the school fees of another man’s daughter before, so.

    “Some women over there will say happy fathers day to themselves when they are not good to be a mother or housewife to their children. You can’t blame them, they have no good background and dont have their parents together, that is why they don’t know what Father’s Day is.

    “I am a father to all my children. I pray for all fathers in Jesus name.”

     

  • Fathers’ Day: Clerics charge fathers on nurturing healthy homes for safer society

    Fathers’ Day: Clerics charge fathers on nurturing healthy homes for safer society

    An Anglican Cleric, Most Reverend Alexander Ibezim, has charged fathers to take seriously the responsibility of building healthy homes to enhance a safer society.

    Ibezim, the Archbishop, Ecclesiastical Province of the Niger and Bishop of Awka Anglican Diocese, made the call in a message he delivered to mark 2021 Father’s Day celebration.

    He said that fathers, being the heads of the families, needed to be celebrated for the important roles they played in enlarging the society, hence a day was set aside to celebrate them.

    He said that fathers had great responsibilities to nurture their homes to develop a great society.

    At the Church of the Pentecost, Awka, Venerable Ekene Nwafor, Vicar in charge of the Church, read the only text during the service to mark Fathers’ Day.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the title of the message was, “Joseph the Carpenter: A Role Model” with the text taken from the Gospel of Luke 2, verse 41 – 42.

    Nwafor, also the Archdeacon, Awka Central Archdeaconry, charged fathers to ensure that they were rooted in Christ to be able to raise healthy homes.

    He encouraged fathers to hold onto prayers as only solution to a challenging time and at any time where life challenges steered at them, face to face.

    Mr Osita Obi, Chairman 2021 Fathers’ Sunday Planning Committee of the church of the Pentecost, urged fathers to place home training and care of the family as their main duty.

    Obi said that more attention should be given to family development to have a healthy home that would serve as a unit of socialisation and societal development.

    “When we get the home front right, then we are sure of safe environment that will make life activities thrive, without fear of any attack.

    “Fathers must take responsibilities of their homes,” he said.

    Mr Okey Anyanyo, a member of the planning committee, advised that it was time for parents to sit down and monitor the activities or company their children kept.

    Anyanyo said that parents had placed materialism above proper and sound home grooming and had abandoned the care of the home to domestic helps.

    “It is time for a rethink and a change of attitude.

    “Many parents cannot give full account of who their children outside home are. Some fathers think that to care for a home is to provide money.

    “This is not so. Fathers need to monitor what goes on in their homes,” he said.

    Mrs Victoria Nwosu, a parishioner, commended the church for setting out a day to celebrate fathers for their enormous work in home development as well as to remind them of their great importance in home care.

    In the same vein, Venerable Chris-Nkem Okafor, Vicar Saint Judes’ Church Adazi-Ani, in Adazi-Ani Archdeaconry, Anaocha Local Government Area of Anambra, urged those fathers who shied away from their responsibilities to sit up.

    Okafor said that some fathers had, through family negligence, been championing single parenting and warned that they should live up to their call of parenting.

    “Parenting as was seen in the life of the biblical Joseph instills discipline, love, peace and togetherness in the families; the story should not change today,“ he said.

    He appealed to fathers to love their wives, look inwards into their families and discipline themselves, noting that when they got it right in their families the society would be a better place.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondent who monitored the celebration reports that the service sessions were peaceful.

    NAN reports that some fathers spoke on the significance of the day, including Chief Silas Ejide, Obum Ezeaku, Dr Chijioke Umezue and Beaneth Ugoagu.

    They appealed to fathers to eschew social lifestyle that triggered division and collapsed marriages.

    NAN reports that services in the churches visited were conducted by fathers while, also, special prayers were offered for the enthronement of peaceful families and security of the nation.

  • Father’s Day: Mercy Aigbe, Lanre Gentry clash

    Mercy Aigbe’s estranged husband, Lanre Gentry has slammed her over her Father’s Day Instagram post.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that Aigbe and Gentry have been at loggerheads since their controversial separation back in 2017.

     

    The actress had taken to her Instagram page on Sunday, June 21, 2020, where she wished herself a happy father’s day.

    Happy Father’s Day to me, to all the responsible fathers out there and all single parents who play the dual role, may we eat the fruits of our labour in Jesus name ?Thank you Jehovah for Grace ? Happy Sunday my lovelies ??,” she wrote.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/CBsLqcaBq_v/

     

    Reacting to her post, Gentry fired back saying:”Happy father’s day and happy Sunday to my good people all over the world. Any woman in the world that says happy father’s day to herself should prepare to be paying for the children’s school fees. Again happy father’s day to me.”