Many people don’t know that the Oluwo of Iwo, Oba
Abdulrasheed Akanbi and the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi grew up in
Ibadan together, in those good old days when men were boys.
The two families were close, as they lived side by side. In
this interview with City People Publisher, Seye Kehinde, he reveals a
lot about his past.
There is this story making the rounds that the figure 16 is significant to your becoming a king, is this true?
Me becoming a king is the will of God. It is what God wants, but sent
me with a message specifically for this generation. You can see it in
the signs. These are signs. Like the 16th ruler of Ife, Ooni Luwo
Gbagida, who happens to have given Telu, the Crown, from Ife. He is the
16th Ooni of Ife. I am the 16th Oluwo of Iwo land. Take note of the
figure 16.
Again, when I wanted to do my coronation, I gave the government 2
dates. They rejected those days. They took the 16th, 16-01-2016. Again,
when my child was to be born, I actually said it, right there. Me and my
wife, we were on the bed. I said to her: You are with a child now and
you will give birth to a boy. And the boy’s name will be Oduduwa. And
when the boy was to be born, he was born on the 16th of November 2016.
That is 16-02-2016 because 11 means 1+1 which is 2.
The same thing with figure 16, which is 1+6, which is 7 (a figure of compliment).
What God is doing is showing us many signs. That is why my coming in
this generation is actually what we can define. God has shown me a lot
about life, about the mystery of life. I hope you know that there is no
hell fire in the real sense of it.
The hellfire they talk about is a proverb. That is why most people
can’t understand him. That is why they call me controversial. But do you
also know that God himself is controversial in a way? I am not God.
The ways of God you can’t understand it. Look at the concept of hell
fire. There is no physical hell fire. Why I am saying all these is for
you to know that there is a likeness between the physical and the
spiritual. I don’t do thingarejust in the physical. I do things from
where the strength comes from.
A lot of the physical come from the spiritual. And if there is no
strength in the spiritual, there won’t be in the physical. Its deep. You
have to understand the deep.
Let’s talk about your growing up years. People say you grew
up with Ogunwusi family in Ibadan; can your recall you growing up with
them and even the current Ooni of Ife?
The life of a king is different from the life of Adewale Akanbi. I
moved on. God has prepared me for this role because he made me go
through a lot in life to prepare me for kingship. He made me travel
round the whole world and in Africa, I have been to so many countries, I
know about so many cultures.
Growing up, I was very independent. God made me go through thick and
thin. I went through a war. I was caught up in the Liberian war in 1989,
when it first started. It started 24th December 1989, when it first
started. It started 24th December 1989 from Nigeria when my brother went
for business.
We thank God. So, you can see what I mean when I say I have been to
the death point and back. That is why things don’t scare me. For you to
say something scares me or you want to do something to scare me, you
have to get to the point I have been to. You have to pass through what I
passed through. Then, I will say you are a man. As a 50 year old man, I
have passed through a lot. What I have passed through in life, a 400
years old man has not passed through it.
When you look back, how do you feel?
When I look back I just say wow! So God was preparing me for greater
heights. I have been to many countries. I have lived there. God
actually prepared me for this position. I believe now.
Kabiyeesi, let’s go back to the Ogunwusi, is it true Kabiyeesi Ooni and his brothers all grew up with you in Ibadan?
Tell us the story…’
(Breaks into laughter) why do you keep asking this question? We are
talking about my life now, not Ooni’s life. We’ve all moved on. I have
made my name. I have a life and I believe in the future that is sure.
He has also made his own name. So we should not be going back to
start talking about how we grew up or not grow up. I don’t need to stand
on anybody’s back to become successful. Oluwo is a household name now.
And we thank God for that.
We give Glory To God. Why are you not asking me about other people, other families or others kings?
It’s because of the significance of two people who grew up together becoming kings in their later years. Can you take us back.?
Now you’ve won. All I can say is that all these is just part of
growing up. We can’t dig into that. Let me just say, yes we knew each
other way back. Yeah. He is younger than me though.
I am 8 years older than him But we give glory to God.
What was the relationship like then? Did you play pranks together? Is it true you were closer to his brother, Tunji? Tell us the closeness of the Akanbi and Ogunwusi family.
Oh, yes! But I like to talk more about my life. I want people to
learn from my own life, my own experience. In 1981, something happened
and I had to leave Iwo. I left home and I was lost for 4 months. I was
captured 2 times by Ritualists and both of them rejected me
.
The 2nd one said let him go ooo. He is an Oba ooo. He is a king. Lets leave it at that.
All I will say is that, I am from Iwo. I grew up in Iwo. The last time I left Iwo was 1981.
I only came back in 1984.
I came around and helped my dad and I left again. I came for
secondary school in Iwo. I was in Class 2 promoting to Form 3 at that
time. That incident happened and I left when I got lost after 4 months I
was found. The man who owns that building, out there, where Wema Bank
is located was the one that found me at a petrol station in Lawanson.
When I came back, my mother said you are not going back to Iwo again.
That was how I ended up with my uncle. It is not only in Akobo,
Bashorun area of Ibadan that me and Oonis family lived together. We
started from the area called Holy Trinity, Seventh Day Adventist area.
At that time, we were living side by side, by Senator Soji Akanbi’s
family house at Holy Trinity.
He was just a big boy then, who just came back from England. He
didn’t want to talk to anybody. He would put his hands in his pocket and
put his head up high in the air. He is the son of Alhaji M. Akanbi. He
knows me good.
So, we have been close by then, but the family didn’t know each other
at that time. But when I moved to my uncle’s place in Akobo, they were
living just the street across. That was when we started knowing each
other. We and Tunji played soccer together. Do you know Tunji Ogunwusi?
The Primewater view, Real Estate company owner?.
He was at St. Patrick’s Grammar School. Me, I was at Oba Akinyele
Memorial High School. It’s almost a fence dividing us, just a few houses
away. We used to go to school together and we came back home together.
We used to go to parties, all those kiddies parties, all those disco
parties. It was great. Tunji was a very good soccer player. He played
good soccer.
I don’t know if he still plays soccer now. He, myself and others we
always made up a team to play in Akobo at that time. There was a primary
school in Akobo at that time, and we always made a team.
We used to go to school together. Its just on that road, straight road from Akobo.
It was great growing up during that time. I was living with my Uncle
called (Uncle Onifade) Alhaji Raimi Onifade, he is a younger brother to
my mum. That’s where I lived. That is where we got to know. We thank
God that we are all great people today. At least we’ve made an impact
in Yorubaland.
One thing I want people to know is that the new dispensation of what
kingship is all about is here and we thank God for it. And my own
message to kings is for us to be servants. It’s not about money. It’s
not about gathering money. There are many rich kings that have gone and
they are no more.
We don’t remember them. I am talking about many great kings with
money. Money doesn’t make great kings. Money doesn’t make you great. Its
only for a while.