Its been 3years since the late iconic singer, Christy Essien Igbokwe, passed
on and her husband Edwin Igbokwe sheds more light on what took place after her
death ,saying he left her corpse in a room in their home for 3 months hoping
she would wake up and why he decided to remarry.
Below is what he told Saturday Punch
That morning of her death, pastors and other prayer warriors ended morning prayer in her room; she whispered amen, and then slept off. It was exactly 9a.m. I felt dazed, shocked and awed when I was told I lost my ‘everything,’ my companion and the love of my life. Jebose, I caved into denial zone. We immediately moved her body to a room in our home, unknown to many. My late wife warned that her body must not be deposited in the mortuary. I had to respect her wishes. So we decorated a room in our house and laid her down.Continue to read.
That morning of her death, pastors and other prayer warriors ended morning prayer in her room; she whispered amen, and then slept off. It was exactly 9a.m. I felt dazed, shocked and awed when I was told I lost my ‘everything,’ my companion and the love of my life. Jebose, I caved into denial zone. We immediately moved her body to a room in our home, unknown to many. My late wife warned that her body must not be deposited in the mortuary. I had to respect her wishes. So we decorated a room in our house and laid her down.Continue to read.
She was beautiful, peaceful in her sleep. The media and the enlarged burial
committee members didn’t know where she was after her death. She lay in that
room for almost three months. I was going crazy. I didn’t want to believe she
would not wake up. She was smiling peacefully. I couldn’t believe it. I made
sure I looked at her every day. I was confused, depressed, dejected and
hopeless. The children began to monitor me. I was still in denial, hoping she
was asleep… she would wake up. I kept reassuring myself. She never did.”
Thirty five years ago, I married my soul mate and lifetime partner. She was Nigeria’s lady
of songs, the late Christy Essien Igbokwe. I was a 26-year-old executive at The
Punch while she was a 19-year-old songstress and actress that mesmerised Nigeria’s
entertainment and theatre scenes with her young, affable innocence. Through
those years, we celebrated togetherness and profound love, a love I felt the
first time I blessed my eyes on her; a love that grew stronger each sunrise,
until 9a.m, June 30, 2011. With each day’s sunset, our love blossomed, like
flowers bloomed in spring. We stayed as one through the challenges of life.
There were years of aches and pains, tears of joy and electrifying laughter. We
stayed together and survived the rough and tumbles of life. We shared
everything until it was time for her to go. She lived half a century.
“As I walked down Jebose
Boulevard, I tried to accept and appreciate all
that life privileged after her eternal transition. It is over three years since
Christy died. The denials, the depressions, forward from her death are paths to
healing. I missed and mourned her tenderly. Time and support from friends and
family were therapies to a second chance at life, living and loving. No one
understands the discomfort and trauma of losing a dear family member such as
your siblings, your parents or wife, a dearest lifetime partner; (the cherished
one you swore before God and the people to love till death do us part), until
it happened to them: We are never the same when we lose those that we loved and
admired. A part of us leaves with them. Every one of us would come to that
place in our lifetime; what matters is how we handled our different
circumstances and who would be there to comfort us as we grieved. The mourning
season may never end. I can imagine days of guilt, days of tear drops on the
pillows and silent wails for losing my dearest wife. The pain is part of
passionate memories, of a privileged, shared moment in our lives. These walks
with you, Jebose, ignited emotional past pains of losing my late wife and a
closure of tragic and traumatic chapters of my life.
Christy was special and spectacular. She was a prophet. She revealed when
she would die to the children and by extension, to me: she revealed to us that
she had only half a century in this ‘wicked world;’ she told me that when death
came, it would be middle of the year. She shared with close friends and members
of the family, her end time. I always dismissed her because I was not ready to
lose her.
She told our children that she would live for 50 years and that any single day thereafter, they should be thanking God. She died June 30, 2011 at age 50.
She told our children that she would live for 50 years and that any single day thereafter, they should be thanking God. She died June 30, 2011 at age 50.
During one of our affectionate conversations, she told me she would be sick
for three days before her death. She said she would exit without burden to
anyone or herself. I didn’t believe, until it happened: four days before her
death, she complained of stomach ache. We went to the hospital for scanning and
treatment: the hospital placed her on overnight admission and began treatment,
but she wanted to go home. Her desire to go home was bolstered by hospital’s
electric power interruption. The hospital’s generator was also broken down. She
said rather weakly, that she wanted to go home since the hospital had no
electricity. I honoured her request. We left the hospital for our home. Halfway
into our street, the doctor called and informed me that the generator suddenly
activated, surprisingly nothing was wrong with it, we could return to continue
treatment; we were almost home, my wife said she didn’t want to go back to the
hospital.
“The next day, the illness continued at home. She refused to go back to the
hospital: the doctor came to the house and placed her on a drip. Even though
she was weak, she was active and independent; she refused any assistance; not
even a support on the staircase and into the car, as we set out for hospital
again, having encouraged her to return to a different hospital for
re-examination. I drove her into the waiting arms of doctors who further
examined my late wife in a specialist hospital (Lagos State University Teaching
Hospital, Ikeja). She was placed on admission. She was seeing things and in her
own world, as she lay ill, she was concerned about the staff and other patients
in the hospital. She was kept overnight because of the diagnosis. The second
night, she requested prayer warriors to begin intense prayers, not for her but for
us, the living, and for her peaceful transition. She encouraged nurses in the
hospital to pray: she would whisper prayer points and choruses. She muttered
some messages to our God-son, George, who was with me in the hospital. We went
into frenzy shouting for joy when she mentioned that ‘we were victorious and it
was all over.’ By 5.30am June 30, 2011, we witnessed deteriorating changes in
her health. I phoned Obi, our first son, and he quickly arrived at the hospital
to assist. I dashed out to seek a transfer for her to another (the intensive
care) room in the hospital. I left Obi and George with pastors and prayer
warriors who arrived to pray with us. Something happened while I was gone. The
mood changed when I returned. I smelt sadness from the travelling breeze
within. The mood was solemn. I saw the sad faces of hospital staff and my son:
I felt strange. Everyone from the doctors tried to find a way to tell me she
had died… One of the midwives called me to the side and said I should brace up
because my wife died few minutes then. That morning of her death, pastors and
other prayer warriors ended morning prayer in her room; she whispered amen, and
then slept off. It was exactly 9a.m. I felt dazed, shocked and awed when I was
told I lost my ‘everything,’ my companion and the love of my life. Jebose, I
caved into denial zone. We immediately moved her body to a room in our home,
unknown to many. My late wife warned that her body must not be deposited in the
mortuary. I had to respect her wishes. So we decorated a room in our house and
laid her down.
She was beautiful, peaceful in her sleep. The media and the enlarged burial
committee members didn’t know where she was after her death. She lay in that
room for almost three months. I was going crazy. I didn’t want to believe she
would not wake up. She was smiling peacefully. I couldn’t believe it. I made
sure I looked at her every day. I was confused, depressed, dejected and
hopeless. The children began to monitor me. I was still in denial, hoping she
was asleep… she would wake up. I kept reassuring myself. She never did.
“I finally accepted her death when the pallbearers came into that room and
placed her in a coffin for the Commendation Service at Arch Bishop Vining
Memorial Cathedral, Ikeja on September 9, 2011 and from there later through the
Muritala Mohammed Airport, Ikeja to Akanu Ibiam, Enugu airport en route Awka,
Anambra State for funeral service and burial the next day. I knew then, that my
best friend, my partner, my soul mate, the mother of my beautiful children, was
truly gone.
“After the burial, I was alone and lonely, I felt guilty for her death. I
never expected to bury my wife. I always prayed that when my time was up, she,
our children and grandchildren would bury me. I began to question God in these
transitional periods: I was near complete depression because life was no longer
interesting to me: I was lonely and mourning my wife. I was empty. I told
everyone that I would never remarry because no woman could replace my late
wife. I was suicidal.
After her burial, the pain continued as life began to settle into normalcy,
I began to see her in my dreams, encouraging me to live my life. She said she
knew if I had the privilege of spending more time with her, I would have
corrected certain things in our lives. She said I must move on with my life.
Throughout our 32 years, we shared everything: we never separated from the same
bedroom. The only time we separated was when we kept her body in a separate
room while planning her funeral. Counselling from well-wishers helped me to
begin to accept a life without her.
“Her appearances in my dreams encouraged me to move on. In one of such
appearances, she told me: “I came and I have fulfilled my destiny on earth. I
wished I stayed longer but that was my destiny and God’s words must surely come
to pass in our lives. I am not coming again. I am happy where I am. It is well
with all of you! Please I want to be remembered always in happiness. Stop
getting worried any longer because you do most times. You cry often for missing
me and wished that I lived so that you make some amends. It is too late now.
You should move on. Your focus should be how to live long for our kids. Advise
them properly and correct them positively whenever they go wrong, for their own
good. Take good care of them and their offsprings as long as you witness and
always bless and not curse any of them. (She smiled…..) I never cursed any of
them. I only tried to make them look forward to being independent as my last
days on earth approached. Because you need to live long for the kids, you can
remarry instead of running into some temptations that are building up. Pray
hard. God will show you the right person. The person should not be very young.
She must be older than our first kid. She must be able to stand in for the sake
of the kids but she must not participate directly as one of the owners in any
of our already established companies unless with express permission of all the
kids. She will obey you. I must be respected. You know other things that would make
the relationship to be soothing to me in death and useful to you in life unless
if you want to continue to deceive yourself. You must not allow her do anything
you know would not be pleasing. You are an intelligent man, I did say this
often and I leave you to your conscience (she smiled…) till we meet to part no
more. My love to all still existing and I want all to know this.”
“If she didn’t appear to me in my dreams, I wouldn’t have remarried. I
remarried after three years of her death. Time reversed everything. I didn’t
want a situation where I would be bringing different women to our home: After
the dreams, I began to consider marriage again. Being alone may not be the
problem, the problem is the temptations that loneliness and being alone
ferment. That would be very disrespectful to her memory and our children. I
remarried, with her blessings. I am no longer mourning but her memories are
indelible.”
4 comments:
this is barbaric, what? hmmmm i say no more... may her soul rest in peace.
what can we describe this to be, could this be love or what? did the body not smell? na waoooooo i am confused here sweet pikin.
I seriously believe this is the height of craziness, should he not be arrested? is this not violation of any law?
what is this about keeping a corpse in the room for months not even days, did he embalm her?
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