Home News Eye Surgery: Olanrewaju Adepoju Jets Off To India After ‘Strange Lady’ Donated...

Eye Surgery: Olanrewaju Adepoju Jets Off To India After ‘Strange Lady’ Donated N10m To Him

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Kola Olootu. left, with Olanrewaju Adepoju during a live radio programme...
Kola Olootu. left, with Olanrewaju Adepoju during a live radio programme...

Veteran entertainer and poet, Olanrewaju Adepoju has jetted out of Nigeria to India to undergo a comprehensive eye surgery.

PMParrot was exclusively informed by a source close to the family that the ‘Ewi Exponent’ travelled out on Sunday, October 8, 2017.

It  was also exclusively gathered that his trip was made possible by the solo campaign carried out by ace broadcaster, Otunba Kolawole Olootu.

Said our source “Otunba Olootu sometime ago started a campaign to raise money for Alhaji. The move was first opposed by the family but he was later asked to go ahead.

“He used his online medium and his very popular ‘Oselenkejo’ programme on Yinka Ayefele’s Fresh 105.9 FM Radio.

“Over one and a half million naira was directly raised by Olootu. After this, a good ‘Samaritan’ lady who heard Olootu’s programme just called Alhaji out of the blues and sent in exactly ten million naira into his account.”

This gesture, PMParrot gathered was the turning point because only seven million naira was the target.

Olanrewaju Adepoju, 77, can safely be categorised as a product of self-development, aided by his unrelenting search for knowledge, even when his humble background in Aba Oke pupa village in Ido Local Government Council of Oyo State was almost a clog on the wheel to his destination.

It was always a tough time for him when his schooling cousins visited him in the village during vacation and flaunted their proficiency in the use English Language.

Instead of being intimidated, the experience further ignited his desire to acquire western education, even if it meant suffering in the process.

Adepoju saved money from the farm produce he sold and bought his first book entitled ABD Olope, a Yoruba alphabetical book, and was tutored by his younger cousin, Muili Oyedele. Within a week, Adepoju mastered all the letters, to the surprise of his home teacher.

His hunger for more books pushed him to Ibadan where he took up jobs as houseboy and newspaper vendor, and saved money to buy more books. The Western Region Library in Ibadan played a key role in his academic development, as Adepoju practically made the place to his second home – he would always be found reading and asking questions.

While he was working and paying regular visits to the library, his privileged friends were already undergraduates at the University of Ibadan. However, the smart Adepoju would always visit the campus to learn more from his friends, so much that at some point, he was assumed to be a student of the institution.

Interestingly, his determination and diligence paid off as he became incredibly proficient in English Language, such that he was employed at the defunct Peoples Star Press, Ibadan as a proof reader.

Adepoju would later work as a petrol attendant, also in Ibadan, where he started to write poetry during his spare time. An opportunity came when a friend to his former employer spotted him with his script and encouraged him to take his talent to the then Western Nigeria Broadcasting Corporation (WNBC).

That was the beginning of Adepoju’s journey to stardom as a poet, playwright, author and social crusader, who used the power of his poetry to influence successive government policies. He wrote Sagba Dewe, Ironu Akewi, Orirun Yoruba, among others. Before he became a household name, he had some challenges, particularly at WNBC, where he was faced with the option of losing the copyright of his recorded poetry works to the company, or facing sanction.

He was asked to submit all his scripts, a directive Adepoju declined, tendered his resignation letter instead and ceased to work for the WNBC, where he had served in different capacities as newscaster, presenter, programme assistant, on N82 monthly salary. He did not just submit the letter, he also attached with it one month salary in lieu of notice as required by the rules of his workplace at the time.

His Ijinji Akewi, a five-minute poetry at dawn, warmed him into the heart of the management and the listening public. Adepoju became full-time professional poet, recording hit albums and featuring at social functions, where he was regularly appreciated. Prominent Yoruba indigenes are on the long list of the beneficiaries of his service, including some state governors who sought his voice in selling their policies and achievements to the public.

His fame as fearless defender of the Ibadan cause, in the face of critics, earned him the Alasa of Ibadanland, a chieftaincy title bestowed on him by the late Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Yusuf Oloyede Asanike, in the 80s.

Despite his achievement, Adepoju has done for the society and himself, he is currently confronted with deteriorating sight, a development that is denying him the opportunity to continue with his dream of giving the world his autobiography. Although as an Islamic scholar, he is optimistic that his sight will be restored, he is not foreclosing receiving help from kind-hearted Nigerians. And now, the help has come.

It is expected that when he returns from the Sight Restoration Centre in India in the next couple of weeks, his sight would have been partially, if not fully, restored.

The eye was once operated upon by the Eye Foundation in Ikeja, Lagos but it was not the solution. He needed to replace the whole socket because the retina is damaged beyond further repair, and the Sight Restoration Centre in India is reputed for giving that service. That is why he was referred there.

From all of us at Parrot Xtra Magazine and PMParrot.com, we wish this elder statesman soonest recovery.

Packaged by Alice Egbedele with additional reports from tribuneonlineng.com

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