I Can’t Return To The Palace With Ooni’s Six Wives - Queen Naomi
The ex-wife of the Ooni of Ife, Queen Silekunola Naomi Ogunwusi, who recently clocked 30, shares with Samson Folarin some of her life’s experiences and how they have shaped her into who she is.
Queen Silekunola Naomi Ogunwusi is a woman of different parts. Can you
provide a highlight of your journey so far?
I started ministry at a very young age, or let me say that I
started to have a good relationship with God at a very tender age. Before I
got to know the Lord, I was having some supernatural experiences. However, at
the age of nine, I gave my life to Christ, and got baptized with the Holy
Ghost with evidence of speaking in tongues. I went through primary and
secondary schools at the Akure Academy before I got admitted to Adekunle
Ajasin University. I became popular there.
I was going to 18 years
when I got God’s call to start my ministry formally, and I went into
evangelistic ministry. For some reasons, I could not continue at the
university at that time; that was because of the call. I was doing fine
academically; I came out with flying colors in anything I did at that time.
However, one was stronger than the other.
I continued full-time
until I was 25 and got married. I am still in ministry; many assumed that I
got married and stopped ministry. I had several crusades while in the palace,
and I have gone on outreaches; we have videos to back it up. I am currently
back in school, studying at the Elizade University.
You are naturally beautiful and attractive, how do you ward off men?
Early enough, I took some measures even before I came into the
limelight, and some people started seeing them as excessive, awkward and off.
However, those things I structured helped me. A pretty young girl, it does not
matter if you spit fire, you walk into a space, they don’t care if you are
coming to minister. The first thing they are seeing is not what is coming out
of you, but what is outside of you. And would you blame a complete man?
Because once a man is complete, he is attracted to anything beautiful. Would
you blame him if he started making advances? Those who are uncouth and
ill-mannered will even want to take it by force.
I was always
going in company with people, especially family members. I had older siblings
and I had my mum. Every time I went out to minister or see people, you would
never see me alone. It was like that and it was so difficult that people
wondered, ‘Who’s going to marry her?’ Because, how are you going to approach
me? You’re never going to see me alone.
I always have someone, and
my phone is always on speed dial. So, once I press it, they will get me in a
matter of seconds or minutes, and you will also know that I am not alone even
though we are together in this room alone, there is somebody waiting outside.
So, that was a kind of put-off for people who would have loved to
do something. They don’t really find me that attractive; they find me as,
‘This one must be old school, why will she be going around with people, why
can’t she just walk alone?’
You clocked 30 recently, what do you consider as your greatest achievement?
Ah, there are quite a lot. You know, for a 30-year-old, people
who are three decades ahead of me may not have achieved the things I have
achieved in this little time I have spent on earth.
I am super
excited to be the proud mother of Tadenikawo. It is a whole lot; that’s a
great achievement that will take precedence over all other achievements I have
had.
In ministry, if we need to put together records of the things
I have done, including gathering thousands in the presence of the Lord; many
souls and lives have been touched, changed and transformed. I have been
instrumental to a lot of people’s successes. You will see 50-year-old people
calling me their mother. They are not calling me mummy because I was married
to a king, but because of the impact I made in their lives. It is quite a lot.
Financially, I am not in a bad place. When you look at me
spiritually, career-wise as a public speaker, I am a voice; that’s huge.
Let’s go to your birthday message that you posted on your Instagram page.
You stated, ‘I gave the devil a punch right back in its face. Isn’t that
grace?’ What do you mean by that?
Yes, I think even the devil knows that it’s true it got a punch
right in the face. You know the devil is actually not a person as we look at
it. The devil is a bunch of evils and when you are hit in a way that; imagine
somebody shoots at you but you have a bulletproof vest on. Having a
bulletproof vest doesn’t mean you won’t have your back on the ground due to
the impact of the hit, but you’re going to bounce right back up, and the
shooter will be wondering how did this person rise again. That’s what I meant
when I said that. You know when you stand up and see your shooter, what do you
do? You shoot right back.
Is there anything you will like to share about life in the palace?
I am hesitant about speaking on my experiences in the palace. But
in my usual way of talking, it was a bittersweet experience. Details, I will
not be sharing, but it was a bittersweet experience. There were really sweet
moments and there were really bitter moments. It is not yet time to talk about
it because some things are meant to just teach you by yourself. I believe the
messages are just for me at the moment, when God wants to enlarge and expand
on it and make it a message for the whole world, then I will hear his words
and talk about it.
Lessons learned are personal and they have
helped in shaping me. I am enjoying 30 so much; 30 makes me really strong. I
am too innocent; I think I entered the palace too innocent and soft, but life
is not like that, you have to be strong, bold and courageous.
How does it feel to produce the crown prince of Ife?
(Sings a praise song) It feels beautiful and the greatest miracle
I have experienced in three decades of my life. You can’t take that away from
me. Ask me to drop everything; the crown he has given me, my son is my crown,
Ademide. He is not going anywhere; it is a precious gift, and my shoulder pad
is high. I am holding it like a priceless, untapped, natural resource. I am
very excited about it.
I feel very proud and honoured by God. I
still can’t tell what I did; I still can’t tell why God loves me this much
because I tell you, God has to love me to give me that golden child. I am the
golden goose that lays the golden egg. That is how it feels. It is a special
gift. I am still going to talk about that in a few years to come. I can’t get
over the miracle.
Do you have any regrets?
Hmm…regrets? You know, even
when people talk about regret, I see it differently. If I say I don’t have
regrets, people will think that I am proud. How can you live 30 years of your
life and after everything you have been through, and you don’t have regrets?
But God makes it hard for me to have any regret because in the midst of the
storm, I feel blessed. There is always something to look up to.
There is this song I used to sing, ‘Lord, you have been good to
me, in all circumstances, in all circumstances, in all circumstances’. I’m not
perfect. The only thing I should regret is if I were to be God Himself.
The things that you will say I did wrongly as an under
30-year-old, you, who is 60, can you do them right? If you were to wear my
shoes, can you strut the runway? Can you walk and catwalk the way I have in
these very odd shoes? If you can, then talk about regret to me. So, I’ve got
no regrets.
But for lessons, I’ll say; don’t be too trusting,
don’t see life as black and white. There are many colors to life. Hold on
firmly to God. In my experiences, I have learnt practical faith. Everything
that is standing before you today is a work of faith. My journey has been the
work of faith and endurance.
The things that you expect to break
me cannot break me because for every mistake that I have made, there is
insurance. You can run anyhow if your car has insurance, you will be doing it
anyhow. But if there is no insurance, if you drive anyhow, you will know.
For my life, there is insurance; for my marriage, there is
insurance. Every aspect of my life is insured. I am that girl whom God has
given the grace to eat her cake and have it.
You are out of the palace at the moment. Are you single and ready to
mingle?
It’s a different thing to be single and it is a different thing
to be ready to mingle. But what I can say for sure is that I am a bride
waiting to be dressed up.
Can you clarify that?
You know, ‘Eni ti won gbe iyawo
bo wa ba ko kin garun’. I don’t know how God plans to do it because He is my
event planner. But there is a big event waiting to happen (if you are) talking
about that aspect of my life.
Hmmm, you see this queen, it will
take a strong king to get me; I am single.
Is there a possibility of reconciliation with the Ooni?
I am going to answer that question with a question. As I have
been speaking to you for the past one hour, do I look like someone who can
survive in the midst of six mature and strong women? No! She is but a soft,
strong, gentle woman and I can’t be a square peg in a round hole.
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