A big congrats! The Very Reverend Ade Osinulu is a centenarian. The
former registrar of the University of Lagos shares some of his life
experiences in this interview with Punch's Ademola Olonilua. Enjoy...
How does it feel to be a centenarian?
I am delighted and I give the glory to the almighty God.
How would you describe Nigeria during your days as a youth?
Nigeria during my days was under the colonial rule.
All decisions concerning Nigeria were made in London and we could not do
anything as our hands were tied because we were governed by foreigners.
How are you sure you are 100 years old since there were no birth certificates during your time?
Nobody in my family was educated but one of my uncles, Prof. Olusanya,
took note of when I was born. He was able to take note because he knew
when he went to Ibadan to start a life and he also knew when the news
came to him about my birth. So that was how they determined my date of
birth, through my uncle.
How did you start schooling?
I was born into an illiterate family. While I was in the village in Ogun
State, I had opportunity to see some people go to school but I did not
have the privilege because my parents were poor. Although I did not
have the opportunity to go to school, I always wished secretly that
someday I would have the opportunity and privilege like my friends and
relations who enjoyed the benefits of education. I kept wishing for that
because nobody in my immediate family knew the gates of a school. I
knew that someday, help would come my way and it did.
After being frustrated for a long time that someday I would be able to
join my literate Christian friends in school, help came. My mother was
not the favourite of my father. There was an elderly wife who controlled
my father’s pot of soup and the best things always went to her and her
children. They had direct access to my father and the pot of soup but we
did not have that. We were the underdogs. My mother had two brothers,
Prof. Olusanya and Shittu Shonubi; one was a Christian while the other
was a Muslim. These two brothers saw how my father unjustly treated our
mother, so they determined to help her out of her problem. The almighty
God put it in them that they should sponsor their sister’s children
through school, so they decided to take me and my brother to Ibadan for
proper upbringing and training. The first person that went to Ibadan was
my elder brother, Isaac Badejo Osinulu.
All that time, I was hoping that someday I would join him in Ibadan
because anytime he came home, he always talked about life in Ibadan.
They sent him to Agbeni Wesleyan School and they watched him for about
three years, expecting that he would show signs of advancement in his
education but they found out that he was not a bookworm. He was not the
kind of pupil they were expecting, so they decided that for his sake,
they should take him away from school to learn a profession. They
withdrew him from school and took him to where he learnt how to be a
goldsmith. God was with him and he made quick progress at his craft and
impressed all that knew him. In no time, he became an expert in the job
and he was known as a very good goldsmith.
In the meantime, I followed suit and went to Ibadan for my uncle to
train me. Indeed God’s plan is great because nobody knew I would become
anything in life as a result of that. I was sent to Elekuro Boy’s Day
School, and the school fee in those days was about three pence per term.
The first fee I paid came from my uncle’s wife’s pocket although he had
assured her he would repay her. Again, as God works in mysterious
ways, He sent his angels to prepare the way for me at Elekuro because
from the first day I got into the school till I left, I led my class
even though I did not have any formal training and it went on till I
completed my primary school education without any difficulty. I was sent
to Wesley College on the platform of Methodist Mission Society on the
understanding that as I completed my schooling, I would teach at the
Methodist Boys’ High School, and it worked out very well. At the end of
that training, I became a teacher according to the agreement I had with
the Methodist Mission Society.
Is that how you later became the principal of the Methodist Boys’ High School, Lagos?
That was the foundation. While I was rounding off my primary school
training, a lot of things happened and the first was Chief Obafemi
Awolowo decided to train some students. So, they formed a committee to
choose ten students who would be sent to Wesley College to improve their
education and I was among the ten pupils. With the help of God, I was
able to perform very well and satisfactorily. While we were still there,
another opportunity came which helped my life. Some American women,
disturbed by what their country had done to some Asian countries with
atomic bombs, decided to train some youths worldwide by bringing them to
America to study as a form of compensation and in doing so, they
selected ten of them from West Africa. It was decided that Nigeria
should provide a candidate and as God would have it, I fell in favour of
the chairman of the board, E.J Jones. He decided that I should enjoy
that scholarship. I was sent to Northwestern University, Illinois. There
I had the favour of both the students and the teachers. I made good
progress and I won the coveted intermediate degree which enabled me to
teach in a secondary school. I later came back and became a classroom
teacher.
Can you remember the events that took place in 1914, when Nigeria was amalgamated?
I cannot remember that event because in those days, students were
students and politicians were politicians. You cannot be a student and a
politician together.
Did the World War affect Nigerians?
Yes, it did especially the World War II. I cannot fail to remember that
because what affected Britain in those days affected Nigeria. A Nigerian
could not travel abroad just like that because of the war. I had a
cousin who was given a scholarship to study in England; they had to pass
some unusual route to England to avoid being torpedoed. A journey that
should have taken a few weeks took him a much longer time. I was not
unaware of the havoc done during the war.
What did children do for fun while you were growing up?
We had peer groups and we all played together based on our peer group.
Also, we had radio sets but it was of a different kind. Those who had
money could afford a proper radio but those who did not had radio sets
given to them by the Nigerian information service so that they could
have access to information.
Were you born in a hospital?
Saying I was born in a hospital would be far-fetched. None of my parents
was literate, so they could not ensure that we got the best treatment.
Things came my way the way God wanted it, nothing was planned for us. If
a woman was about to be delivered of a baby, if she was from a wealthy
family and she was lucky, she would be treated in the hospital but in my
case, my mother was treated by women in the village who looked after
her during pregnancy. They were the ones that gave her herbs while she
was pregnant. That is what happened.
What are some of the historic events that occurred during your youth that still linger in your mind?
There are many, one of which was the atomic bomb America dropped in Asia
during the war. The Asiatic world was fighting against America. The
Americans saw that the fastest way to end the war was to bomb an
important place in Asia, so the bombing of Hiroshima happened and it was
very disastrous. That event alone was important enough to make you
forget any other event.
Did it affect Nigeria in any way?
No, it did not. The only thing was that it prolonged our connection while travelling between Nigeria and America or Europe.
How would you describe life as a Nigerian under the colonial rule?
Life was better when we began to rule ourselves because self-rule is
always a better option than colonial rule. Those in charge could not do
anything on their own except they had a go-ahead from England and so our
affairs were tied with that of England.
There is a picture of you shaking the hand of Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe. How did you meet him?
I met him on several occasions. He attended Methodist Boys’ High School
and he embraced any opportunity that associated him with the school. On
this occasion you mentioned, it was probably the time the school decided
to honour him as the first governor-general of Nigeria. My receiving
him was a very important occasion.
Is it true that you taught Segun Osoba, Mobolaji Johnson, Rasheed Gbadamosi and the likes?Yes I did.
How would you describe these distinguished Nigerians when they were young boys?
They were all well brought up young men. All the people mentioned had
good connections. Take Gbadamosi for instance, his father was a very
enlightened industrialist who valued education. Somehow, he arranged for
his son to live with me so that he would get education beyond the
surface. Mobolaji Johnson was referred to as Mob J and his father was a
very notable figure during the colonial days. I can’t really say much
about Segun Osoba but he became known for what he is today during his
training at Methodist Boys’ High School. His peers and seniors respected
him for his knowledge.
How would you describe your tenure as the principal of Methodist Boys’ High School?
Humility will not allow me to talk about that but people who knew me and
the school before I became the principal will be able to say much on
the matter. The number of people I have trained like those earlier
mentioned and Ola Rotimi, the playwright would tell you the kind of
school I ran. I was the one that encouraged Ola Rotimi to become what he
was and his father acknowledged it later. When Ola Rotimi wrote certain
several articles, he was visited by the colonialists but his father
opposed them, saying that he would become what he wanted to be. That
encouragement made Ola Rotimi to become the man he was.
How did you transit from a principal to becoming the registrar of the University of Lagos?
If God wants you to become something, he would find an instrument to
make it happen. The instrument He used in my own case was the Most Rev.
E.J Jones, who was the chairman of the Western Nigerian Synod. He was
impressed by my activities, my honesty and devotion to my duties that he
did his best to push me along. When the time came and the Nigerian
government decided to establish the university, E.J Jones felt the
Methodist church should find a footing in that school, so he made the
recommendation that I should be appointed the assistant registrar of the
university and he followed it up with his direct interest. Of course,
that did not please people from the northern and eastern parts of
Nigeria. From there, I moved up the ranks to become the registrar.
We learnt that you love photography?
Yes I do.
But during your time, cameras were not common, how did you develop such interest?
While I was in school, right from the outset, my interest had always
been in photography. At a particular point, a governor of the Western
Region offered a prize in photography and I won that prize. That made my
name in photography. The prize made me more popular and developed my
name in the photography world. Our old boys used to call me Sofoluwe,
which was the name of an old boy who had established his name in
photography.
Why were you referred to as the flying president in the university?
That happened when I was the president of the Student Union of the
University of Ibadan. I knew that people were working against me
especially those from the Eastern region. There was a shooting incident
that occurred and it involved students and the law enforcement agents.
The students of eastern origin wanted us to demonstrate because of the
shooting. They were urging my government to demonstrate so I consulted
some friends who advised me against leading the students to protest.
They said that if I did that, it would give the government an
opportunity to bring out the army against the students, so I decided
against going on protest.
I kept postponing the meeting till I could no longer do so. It was
during the end of my tenure and they had appointed people that would
take over. When the time came, I prepared the agenda putting the
shooting incident as the last topic to be debated. When it got to the
shooting issue, I told them that whatever we decided, we had to be
careful because of our lives. By the time I said that, I was already on
my way to the hostel and when they saw that I was escaping, they started
running after me to injure me because I did not agree to stage the
protest. As they were chasing me, a friend of mine kept shouting that
they should not injure me. I was lucky to get to my room and I locked
myself in there. They started throwing stones at my room. That was how
the name ‘flying president’, stuck.
Is it true that the likes of Samuel Edgal, Amb. Joe Iyalla, and Bola Ige were your contemporaries in school?Joe
Iyalla and Edgal were my contemporaries but Bola Ige was my junior in
school. I cannot describe them in details but they were very vibrant in
the political scene while we were in school. They were active in the
student union and their own sectional unions as well. The Igbo union was
acting against the Yorubas and the Yorubas were also acting against the
Igbos.
Why was there so much tension between the major ethnic groups during your time?
The British people knew how to divide and rule and they used the
technique very well to bring disunity between the Igbos and the Yorubas.
Did your student activism ever put you in trouble?
You cannot be active in the student union and not be in conflict with
any government. If you are in student politics, you must be ready to
take up the gun against any government at any time.
How do you feel being honoured by the University of Ibadan?
It is the Lord’s doing and it is wonderful in our sight. I praise Him
and thank Him that he has allowed me to live so long and well. I thank
God for where I am today because many of us that started the journey are
no more today. There was an event that they had in the university some
years ago and they invited those that were around when the university
was founded. They looked around and I was the only one remaining, all
the others had gone. It is only God I praise for it. Most of my
colleagues that attended the school with me are no more. I am grateful
to God.
Do you have any regrets in life?
No I have no regrets.
Overall, I have only
praises to God for making me alive till date. I am also grateful to God
for all my eight children. My eldest son is a minister of God in
America. I have another child who heads an organisation that
helps people acquire land in Nigeria and abroad. Everyone is doing great
and I am thankful to God.
What has been the happiest and saddest moment of your life?
That is a question I will not like to answer. I will not want to establish bitterness in my life.
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