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The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus - Celebrities - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Entertainment / Celebrities / The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus (22184 Views)

Stella Damascus And Richard Mofe-Damijo (RMD) As Lovers? / Genevieve vs Omotola vs Ini Edo vs Stella damascus / What's Up With Stella Damascus-Aboderin? (After Husband's Death) (2) (3) (4)

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The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by amebono11: 10:58am On May 28, 2009


Stella Damasus
I’m from Delta State. I was born into a Christian family of five girls and a boy. I lost my brother in 1991 to asthma. I lived with my parents until I came to Lagos after my secondary school. I was living with my sister, got into music and that was when I went to Klink Studio, joined a band and started performing live. My daddy is a fantastic man. He is Chief SKC Damasus.

He was a banker all his life. During the war he was a soldier and after the war he became a banker. My mum is a banker as well. I was brought up in a home of bankers. Everything was by the book. You go to school, come back, study, receive guests and the likes. Again, because I had older sisters things were easier. Growing up was fun.

My family name was changed from Ojukwu to Damasus during the civil war because we were being mistaken to be related to a warlord.
I was told that my family name used to be Ojukwu but during the civil war there was confusion because a lot of my family members were mistaken to be related to one war lord. They were burning a lot of houses in my village so my father and his brother decided to adopt my grandfather’s first name. It was a Greek name which was Damasus, my grandfather’s name was Damasus Ojukwu. So I was born into Damasus not Ojukwu and the only thing I know about the civil war are the stories my parents told me.

The first time my mother heard I was going into acting, she summoned a family meeting.
Funny enough my mother used to be opera singer. She used to sing and act in school. Those days their generation was different from ours. She was always complaining about the vices in today’s girls. The first time she heard I was going into acting, there was a family meeting (general laughter). They said I must do law. I actually did a diploma course in UNILAG. I studied business and industrial law. I looked at myself and told myself that I wasn’t cut out for law.

I just wanted to be an entertainer and I told my father. He made me promise him that I must not disappoint him and return home a failure. He told me to do it for the right reason. At that time parents would never allow their kids go into acting, it didn’t carry the respect like it carries now. People have the impression that once you go into acting you’ll be wayward and do drugs. Failure meant, don’t let me hear that you got pregnant or get into drugs. I’ve never been a wayward child and that instilled fear that I must not mess things up because I wanted my parents to be proud of me.

I nearly passed out when I got my first N10,000 fee.
My career as an actress started as fun initially because I never thought I would take it up as a profession. I came to Lagos and the first thing I wanted to do was sing. I went to Klink Studio and met Kingsley Ogoro. He was training me to start doing radio jingles. In the course of my singing a friend of mine came and invited me to accompany her to an audition. Other girls were auditioned but I didn’t participate because I was not there for that purpose. As I was leaving a guy told me to go and audition and I went, read my lines and left.

Three weeks later I was told I got the part. They said they were going to pay me N10 000. I nearly passed out because that was in 1995 and my salary was N700 at Klink Studio. The movie was titled ‘Abused’. I played the role of Freda, it wasn’t the lead role. I was just one of those that played major roles. That was a good start for someone starting out. After that it was easier because other producers watched the movie and started calling me for jobs.

I didn’t know most of the actors and actresses very well but I’d seen Omotola’s movie before that time and I think it was very nice. But the first person that struck me then was Kenneth Okonkwo because of ‘Living in Bondage’. I shouted ‘Andy’ when I saw him and ran to hug him. I asked the director if I was going to act with them and he said yes. I said ‘oh my God, how am I going to do it’. But they were very good to me and they helped me understand my lines.

I went back to school to study Theatre Arts and I was the only female Directing student in my graduating year in UNILAG. I don’t think you learn to be an actress. It’s more of natural talent. There are some things you can learn but if you don’t have the talent it’s not going to be possible. In primary school, they always called me to play the role of Mary or Queen of Sheba and the likes. My mother noticed that I liked to act but never thought it would become a major thing in my life. But when I saw that it was worth looking into, I went to study Theatre Art in University of Lagos (UNILAG).

Going to UNILAG for me was great because before you can say you are a professional you need to understand some things about the profession. It was a bit hectic for me because it was in school that I had my two children. I was married while I was a student, had my children and was working in-between. It wasn’t very easy but we were grateful because we had lecturers that understood our schedule. I graduated in 2004. I left with 2.1 (Second Class Upper). I received my certificate three weeks ago. I would have made a first class but I was four points away from that. I knew I would come out with a great result and that part of my life will not be a waste and I’ll be able to tell my children the truth, not parents that would just tell story.

After that I was ready to go as an actress and I was not just an actress. I was the only female directing student that graduated that particular year. I knew that after a while I’ll go behind cameras and teach and train people about acting. With my degree, I brought techniques into my profession. For instance there is no part of the world you will push me to that I’ll not understand the language of acting just like banking or journalism. When you are empowered with techniques you will be able to understand when your director says I want you to give me an empathy look or method acting.

If a producer says come to my office at 8pm and you carry yourself and dress funny and go there, what are you looking for in somebody’s office at 8pm when the others have auditioned during the day?
A lot of people kept saying there are temptations in the industry, that before you get roles you have to do one thing or the other with the producer but to my greatest surprise I just found out that it was just people that are coming into the industry for the wrong reasons that are going through all of that because if you are a disciplined person and you have talent and you attend an audition and they feel that you are good enough I don’t think anybody will want to spoil his production by just packing in people that don’t have the faintest idea of what to do.

For me it’s a matter of how you carry yourself, if I come to you and I say I want to act in your movie and you say ok come and audition and I come and I go home and you call me to come and act, it’s different from you saying come to my office at 8pm and you carry yourself and dress funny and go there. What are you looking for in somebody’s office at 8pm when the others have auditioned during the day? It was a matter of who am I for me. Am I good enough to get the job or will I get it based on merit? The moment that I have to do something extra to get something then I’m not meant to do it. I walk away but because of the way most of us carried ourselves, we didn’t have to face all that harassment because from day one we identified who we were and how we were. If you don’t give me the job, no problem.

I will head back to my studio continue my radio jingle, collect my money at the end of the month and go home. Those things were there but I did not enter into that because of money, fame but because I found something that was a passion of mine, that I wanted to do and actually make positive impact on the future. I was very fortunate that I didn’t have to pass through all of that. I don’t mix business with pleasure. Everybody knows that about me. If you see me outside the production, that is a different ball game but if you come to me based on the fact that you are a producer or director, I can’t date you. Even then all of them used to see me as a small girl because I used to ask if I could help them carry their bags because they were stars and they used to call me a small girl.

I used to have a crush on Tunde Euba.
The one person I had a crush on is not in this country any longer. His name is Tunde Euba, he was in a soap opera, ‘Checkmate’. The guy was just a fantastic actor and I used to wonder if he was human.

The true story about RMD and I
Richard Mofe-Damijo is like my brother. He went to school with my elder sister in Asaba. He went to an all boys’ school while my sister went to an all girls’ school right beside his school. My eldest sister went to school at the same time with him. They were in the same dramatic club. That’s how we knew him, right from when we were kids we used to call him Uncle Evans because that’s his first name. From then on he now went into University of Benin and did Theater Arts and my second sister did Theater Arts in Uniben. So the family relationship continued. My mum loves him.

She would call him and say you have abandoned me and Richard would say I’m leaving you to spend time with your husband, I will soon come and visit. When I moved to Lagos and I was living with my sister, the first thing my sister did when I told her of my interest in films was to ask me to go and see Uncle Evans. I was supposed to be in ‘Out of Bounds’ to play the role that Bimbo played. I broke out in chicken pox two days to shoot the movie and that was how I didn’t play the role again. So my relationship with RMD has been for so many years. How many people are you going to tell that story?There was this story that RMD and I were seen doing something in a car at the Bar Beach, a very untrue and painful story.

We were shooting a film for Charles Novia, a bar beach scene. Before we started shooting my late husband told me and told me he missed his flight and he asked me where I was and I said I was shooting at the beach. He called Mike, his assistant to pick me him from the airport and they came straight to location. My husband bought Agege bread for everybody on location. We were all there, ate Agege bread, crossed to the other side, shot and then we came back to him before he asked me to go for a meeting I had that he’d go on home. A week later, Richard called me to read one paper because people had been blasting him that he did a bad thing. I got the paper and I discovered the woman they wrote about with RMD was me. I was shivering. I drove home and showed my husband, he read it, went into the bathroom and he came out laughing and I asked, why are you laughing, I’m not finding this thing funny. I’m going to fight these people.

He said, cool down, who are you going to fight, can’t you see the date they put here, that was the day I came to spend time with you at the bar beach, I came there with my assistant, so why are you killing yourself? Is it about what people are saying or what I think of you or the truth that you know? How many people do you want to go and start raking for and I said but it’s not nice because people who don’t know the kind of relationship I have with him won’t understand and his marriage could be in trouble.

That was the same time people were saying my husband had stopped me from acting. It was a lie. He was the one that kept saying go there and show your face. Let them know that nothing happened but I declined and stayed at home for two years because I felt if Nigerians do not appreciate the fact that I’m spending the best of my youth entertaining them and making them happy, let me stay at home. I was designing clothes, travelling to Ghana, Cotonou; I started Mon Afrique. I went back after my husband said this is what God has asked you to come and do.

Jaiye Aboderin, my best friend…
You don’t plan love, Na music carry Jaiye and I come together. When I was performing at Jazzville, Jaiye liked my voice and said let’s work together. We set up a band and started performing, making money together and he said I don’t like the fact that we are spending money around, let’s keep it within, why don’t we just get together? And I said as I’m looking at you sef, you are not a bad guy. You are a correct guy. The rest is history. It was great, we had a wonderful working relationship, family relationship. He was my best friend. He was a good man. There is nobody that you’ll meet on earth that would say anything negative about him.

My life with Jaiye was every woman’s dream
My life with Jaiye was every woman’s dream. Everything was good, the way a marriage was supposed to be was the way it was. Everything had timing, everything has explanations, everything was done the way we wanted to do it.
For instance when we had our the first baby, he wanted so much to be there but I said I didn’t want him to be there. I didn’t want him to go through that aspect. He wanted to but I tricked him. I didn’t tell him the exact time that they said it would happen. He just missed by a few hours. It was great, a wonderful experience. Normal labour, painful though, I was very thankful. I changed, became fat, darker but it was a wonderful experience.

Despite Jaiye’s weight, he was energetic.
Regardless of what people saw, Jaiye was the most flexible man I’ve ever saw. You should have seen him perform on stage. He was the one that didn’t get tired. He did all the dancing, jumping around and all that. He was very energetic and full of life. He was doing different things at the same time. He exercised a lot. He played basket ball. His weight was not a problem for me.

The day I became a widow
I had a meeting that day in Yaba. The day was a Friday. I got dressed and he was supposed to go and play squash with his friends. For some reason we spent lots of time chatting that morning. It was a different meeting. We decided that we would spend the day together after his squash and my meeting. I left and while on the bridge my car started giving me problem and I called him that my car (a Land Rover Discovery) was giving me problem. He told me to park it and take a cab to where I was going that he would get a mechanic to come and pick it. Then sometimes around 5 or 6pm, I got a call and the person that called me was somebody that never called me. He was a Lebanese, my husband friend. He asked me a funny question about whether my husband had a history of epilepsy.

He was stammering, he asked about high blood pressure and he said, ‘you know what Stella, can you come to the island?’. He said my husband wanted to see me. I told him my husband was playing squash, he said no that he later hooked up with his friends and decided to go play basket ball at the Lagoon Restaurant. He said he fainted, I said no he couldn’t have fainted because that kind of a man doesn’t just slump and faint. I dropped all I was doing and rushed to the car. The car that was giving me problem suddenly started working. Another friend who is also a Lebanese called me and I wondered why everybody was calling me. He gave the phone to Kate (Henshaw) and I asked what the matter was. She said I needed to come and gave me an address. I knew something was wrong but death was not an option. I did not know how I drove from Herbert Macaulay to the Island. I must have been driving at 200kmph. When I got there, I saw a crowd like you would see at a crusade.

They started looking away when they saw me. Kate whispered something into the ears of something that came with me and that one took off and she wanted to dive under one car. I said they should let me see him since he asked that I should come and see him. They took me to the doctor’s office, and he said ‘I’m sorry to tell you this, your husband is dead. There is nothing we could do about it’.
I did not feel anything at first. I was in another world. I looked around me and all his Lebanese friends were crying. I looked at the doctor and said, ‘did they tell you the kind of person I am, I don’t joke with this kind of things. Tell me where he is so that I can go and see him’. He said he was not joking.

Later I was told that I grabbed him and was shaking him. It was his friends and Kate that were consoling me. I was later told to come and identify him so that I would be sure. I saw him and he looked like he was sleeping. I was still in self-denial. I couldn’t believe that somebody that was so healthy in the morning could just die. I didn’t understand what was happening. Later on, my doctor told him they met in the morning and he checked him and he was alright.

Of course there are some details I won’t be able to give you. A lot of things went on that I couldn’t say now. I wasn’t angry with him because to me he was sleeping. I couldn’t believe he was dead for a long time Not even on the day of service of song. I think it was the day of the burial when I had to pour sand into the grave. I think I just flipped and sat on the floor, I just couldn’t believe it. It was when we got home and people started consoling me that I started looking at myself.

All that talk about him having had a history of high blood pressure was so untrue. He did not have a history of anything, he was a big person and he was taking his time to do the things that he needed to do to stay healthy and up until that day he was healthy because he was checking it, doing his check- ups in South Africa. Anytime I don’t agree when people say there is a history of something. I don’t like that word.

Lessons I learnt from Jaiye’s death.
After his sudden death, I just learnt to take things a little bit easier and there are some things in life now that I take more seriously. I pay attention to my health more, I do more check-ups. I talk to my doctor more, I check myself even before any symptom comes and then I spend a lot of time with family because that’s one of the most important things. To get peace you must be at peace with your home. Even after all the hustling you have to know that if you die and leave all the things you’ve hustled for, that’s the end.

I don’t believe in lazy widows who wallow in self-pity and expect people to come and throw money at them.
What I’ve decided to do is not to dwell on the problems of widowhood because we are using that to deceive ourselves. It has made many women to become lazy and laid back. They are blaming everything on society and government. I always tell young women that as you are getting married, make sure your lawyer has everything thing that your husband owns. You should be the next of kin and you don’t need to wait until a man is 60 or 70 before he writes a will. Even if it’s not about the wife, protect the children, you must do it. Let him put you as his next of kin so that you are protected if anything happens. All these issues of I’m a widow and I’m African, so I must wear black for one year and you wait until your in-laws come to throw money at you should stop. You don’t need to wait for government or others to come and help you out. Nobody will train your children if you don’t work.

There was nothing people did not write about me. They labeled me a merry widow but I asked myself who will help train my children? Nobody. I waited for all those people criticizing me to come and tell me not to work, that they would pay my children’s school fees. Nobody came. So will I say because I was mourning my husband, I should sit down and not work? Mourning never stopped. I’m still mourning him, he’s still in my heart. I still go to the graveside every December. He’ll remain in my heart even if I marry 100 times because he was my first. So, if you want to carry that on your head and go out to beg for money, it will not work.

The Aboderins and my children
My children are very happy, they are great, fulfilled. Everything is fine. It’s not about me. My children have a mind of their own. When they like a person, they are the ones that will say mummy when is he coming again? They are happy.
As for my in-laws, I have decided that I will not comment on anything that has to do with another person that I cannot talk about. I can talk about me, my family but any other family I can’t go there.
But they cannot take my children from me according to any culture because I married in court.

It’s good to be married again
It is good to be married again. It’s a good thing but I don’t want to celebrate my marriage on the pages of newspaper. It just happened. I’m sure you’d like to know if he proposed on bended knees but I can’t talk about that.
It took me this long to re-marry because I did not want to marry for the wrong reasons.
No two human beings are the same, you can never compare one man to another, if not you will remain single for the rest of your life. If you are looking for a replacement, you are looking at marriage for the wrong reason but if you are looking to find love again you have to keep an open mind and start your life afresh which is exactly what I did. I didn’t want to marry because I’m desperate. I didn’t want to marry for the wrong reason. I didn’t want to marry and then pour my frustration on this new person because if you don’t heal inside of you mentally, psychologically, spiritually, if you don’t heal and find love for yourself because losing a husband makes you think of yourself as a different person.

You blame yourself, you blame the world, you blame everything because you are filled with pain and hate, anger it takes the grace of God to calm down and start your life again. To change somebody’s mindset at an adult age is difficult and once that mindset is not changed, once you are not healed of what loss you have suffered, once you have not been able to tell yourself I can love myself again because if I don’t love myself nobody can love me. If I don’t come out and people see joy and peace nobody will be attracted to me.

Do you know the stigma that comes with widowhood in this country, do you know how many families will tell their son ‘’if you near that woman who is married before her husband died and we cannot even explain how that man died till today and she now has children. Then you young man, with all the young girls around you are looking for a woman with two children.’’ All these things happen. It’s not home video. I’ve seen, I’ve heard. For me it was a matter of I’m I looking for a husband now or do I just want to be healed and have joy again in my life because if you are not happy within yourself no man can make you happy. That’s the mistake a lot of women make. I have wonderful kids and we are happy together.

Any man that sees this ready-made, wonderful family should be the one that should be running and say please I want to be a part of this family because what I give off is love, peace, joy because I have decided to deal with my loss internally so that I’m not looking at you the next morning and I’m not worried that what if something happens to this one now, what if one family members comes and say don’t do it? What if he sees one fine girl outside that is very single and has never had kids and she’s very shapely and me I’m ‘after-two’.

For me it’s not how long it was a matter of if I was ready and prepared. Will you be willing to submit to another person totally different? Would I be able to become a good wife, and even try and be a better wife now that I’m older and more matured? There are some things that I know now that I’m supposed to apply. I have a better understanding of how to manage things and make sure that I play my part as a wife. Am I ready to start all over again because to be single for a long time is not an easy thing to just change it over-night. I had to be ready, physically, mentally I have to be ready to allow another man in my life.

Life rotates between life and death
Life and death are like a rotational thing. Some people will go for others to come. Others will come again for others to go. It’s a circle that we all have to pass through, some earlier than others but something that must happen. There must be birth and there must be death. It’s not a good thing when death happens around you but it is inevitable and birth when it happens around you it’s a good thing. As a Christian there are some things that when they happen we will cry about. We will feel pain but we also have to understand that is the way life is. We also have to understand that according to our faith those people up there in heaven are looking at us and laughing at us and they are probably saying that you think this is life you are living, this is where the action is. I still feel pain when death comes early, especially when it claims the good ones.

For a long time after Jaiye died, I felt like dying too so that I could go and join him, I have not stepped out with my husband; the man whose photo was published as my husband is not my husband
That picture is not my husband, hope you know that. I’ve asked them to do a retraction and apology. I saw my face in the front of a magazine with a headline that says ‘Stella Damasus steps out with new husband’. I don’t know who that man is. They called me on phone to apologize that their photographer made a mistake and I told them to make it known to people that it was a mistake because that man could be someone else’s husband. When my husband saw it, he laughed.

I’ve played a lot of roles but I haven’t found any that defines the real Stella
The movie, ‘Widow’, is not my story. I didn’t write the story. I shot the film in August, Jaiye died in December. I did my job to the best of my ability like I played in other films. If I didn’t become a widow I don’t think anybody will be asking me this particular question because I’ve done other films that are equally very good. There was ‘Engagement Night’, ‘Queen of the Rain Forest’ where I played a queen whose land was given to her by her father who passed away. There was an enemy neighbour community that wanted to overthrow the queen and then her younger sister who wanted to be queen The younger sister set up a group of people to cause a war so that she would go into war and fight and be killed but unfortunately for her she went into war and the prince of the other kingdom saw her and fell in love with her. He didn’t kill her because he could have. He allowed her to win the battle and she went back home and then he came to her kingdom disguised as a beggar just to try and win her over and then with time she started to like the man and then the rest is history.

In ‘Engagement Night’, my character on the eve of her wedding saw somebody from her past and she was afraid she might tell her husband because she didn’t know that the person from her past was her husband’s best friend. On the engagement night she went to the hotel of her husband’s friend to beg him to leave her and her man alone. Unfortunately, the groom who was also returning the wedding tie of his bestman, his friend caught his bride-to-be in his friend’s room. He went ahead with the wedding ceremony but he made her life hell.

I’ve played a lot of roles but I haven’t found any that defines the real Stella because many people have the impression that I’m very emotional because I cry a lot. That’s because those are the kind of roles that they’ve given me over the years but that’s not who I am.

When preparing for a role, I work in front of my mirror a lot.
A lot has to go into preparing for a role. First, I have to define who the character is, each role is totally different from the next. You can’t use your personal life that is totally different from a character to play that character. It means that you have to build a brand new character, know how does this person talk, how does she think, her age, educational background, what relationship does she have with the next person, who is she supposed to be and how are people supposed to see her. There are a lot of factors. It’s more than reading and cramming your script. I work with my mirror a lot. For each line, I want to see how the camera will capture myexpression. Sometimes I record myself at home.
http://www.modernghana.com/movie/4769/3/jaiye-rmd-and-i-stella-damasus-.html
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by bluespice(f): 12:51pm On May 28, 2009
too long tongue where's his picture?
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by tpiah: 1:19pm On May 28, 2009
eyah- what a touching story.

where's her real husband though.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by amebono11: 1:21pm On May 28, 2009
yea, her story is quite touching
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by Ben13: 2:38pm On May 28, 2009
BrB for a careful reading
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by ifyalways(f): 2:40pm On May 28, 2009
No picshur,no comment cheesy
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by Outstrip(f): 6:59am On May 29, 2009
Wow. I am glad she was able to move on. The fact that she mentioned that her she married in a court so nobody could take her children makes you wonder if they indeed tried to take her children. Nigerian culture baffles me. I don't know how many Nigerian movies I have watched were a mother in law or late husbands uncle comes in and takes the children. I also like how she used the interview to put the word out there to Nigerian women. Do not be a fool. Make sure all your husband has is also in your name. I don't understand how a man can die and then his family members will shamelessly come and fight for something that does not belong to them. Even in 2009.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by Sissy3(f): 7:27am On May 29, 2009
interesting
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by Nobody: 4:38pm On May 29, 2009
Outstrip:

Wow. I am glad she was able to move on. The fact that she mentioned that her she married in a court so nobody could take her children makes you wonder if they indeed tried to take her children. Nigerian culture baffles me. I don't know how many Nigerian movies I have watched were a mother in law or late husbands uncle comes in and takes the children. I also like how she used the interview to put the word out there to Nigerian women. Do not be a fool. Make sure all your husband has is also in your name. I don't understand how a man can die and then his family members will shamelessly come and fight for something that does not belong to them. Even in 2009.

Couldn't agree more.

Didn't know she shot the movie "Widow" before her husband died. All this while I thought it was from experience. That was good acting there Stella, nearly made me cry and I don't cry easily. cool Kudos to you and may God continue to see you through.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by AloyEmeka9: 5:32pm On May 30, 2009
The Aboderins and my children
My children are very happy, they are great, fulfilled. Everything is fine. It’s not about me. My children have a mind of their own. When they like a person, they are the ones that will say mummy when is he coming again? They are happy.
As for my in-laws, I have decided that I will not comment on anything that has to do with another person that I cannot talk about. I can talk about me, my family but any other family I can’t go there.
But they cannot take my children from me according to any culture because I married in court.

Women the tire me sometimes. She no wan talk about her late husband's family and what they did to her yet she summarized it for us to read. The last sentence above is enough for anybody to figure out that all is not well between her and her late husband's family. What is more to say?
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by busybody20: 5:36pm On May 30, 2009
@ amebo no 1,

Pls summarise it . .  . Its too long and i got bored after a while!  undecided
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by shollyaj(m): 3:24am On Jun 01, 2009
So Touching
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by AloyEmeka9: 7:08am On Jun 01, 2009

@ amebo no 1,

Pls summarise it . . . Its too long and i got bored after a while!
You are too lazy to read it but you want amebo to read it for you?
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by amebono11: 7:43am On Jun 01, 2009
Aloy.Emeka:

You are too lazy to read it but you want amebo to read it for you?

no mind busybody, she sabi busy body for this forum, but she no fit read cheesy grin
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by dominique(f): 10:02am On Jun 01, 2009
ifyalways:

No picshur,no comment cheesy
abi o tongue
@amebo

you should have told us we were going to be reading her life story. . . or how does the topic relate to the post tongue
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by amebono11: 1:45pm On Jun 01, 2009
dominique:

abi o tongue
@amebo

you should have told us we were going to be reading her life story. . . or how does the topic relate to the post tongue



maybe if u read the post u wont be asking this qstion

better still ignore the thread if u cant read
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by tpiah: 3:16pm On Jun 01, 2009
hope Stella doesnt keep people waiting too long for her husband's photo sha.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by Sissy3(f): 2:33am On Jun 02, 2009
tpiah:

hope Stella doesnt keep people waiting too long for her husband's photo sha.

she's prolly not going to be quick to show him, if at all she will
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by Nobody: 2:50am On Jun 02, 2009
tpiah:

eyah- what a touching story.

where's her real husband though.
Now you know you didn't read all that.

Oya, Jenny, wey the pic?
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by No2Atheism(m): 4:24am On Jun 02, 2009
i can't even bring myself to read it. It is too long.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by dominique(f): 9:24am On Jun 02, 2009
,amebo no1:

maybe if u read the post u wont be asking this qstion

better still ignore the thread if u cant read
good idea
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by Pepeye(f): 9:28am On Jun 02, 2009
A run down of her biography
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by JJYOU: 9:49am On Jun 02, 2009
is there a law that states if you married in court the family cant take your kids from you if they want?

Outstrip:

Wow. I am glad she was able to move on. The fact that she mentioned that her she married in a court so nobody could take her children makes you wonder if they indeed tried to take her children. Nigerian culture baffles me. I don't know how many Nigerian movies I have watched were a mother in law or late husbands uncle comes in and takes the children. I also like how she used the interview to put the word out there to Nigerian women. Do not be a fool. Make sure all your husband has is also in your name. I don't understand how a man can die and then his family members will shamelessly come and fight for something that does not belong to them. Even in 2009.
i bet you will sponsor a bill too for men to get their wives assets. i saw many women here telling some lady to go build a house in her name i wonder why things like this never crossed any mind.

in most nigeria's customs it is the kids that inherits the wealth. so many men have "gone too soon" as they say simply for owning a house. some of you need to go and look into why families ( sadly mostly women) take properties from bereaved women. i am all for fairness but i am seriously against women taking family wealth because she has a pair of child bearing hips. our customs generally dont allow room for indiviluality it is always family.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by amebono11: 2:20pm On Jun 02, 2009
there is no law jjyou but im not in support of some family members wanting to take a womans wealth and kids from her all cos shes a widow and has no hubby to fight for her, if she was living a reckless life and isnt ready to care for her kids, then i'd support it , but no way in dis case will i go with that thrash, dis is a woman dat went thru pains for 9 months, restless night, labour pains, and then finally pushed her kids, and u expect some family members dat did not go thru wat she went thru to take her kids from her? no way

her husband named her his next of kin, leaving all his wealth to her, family members didnt fight for the wealth when he was breathing, it was immediately his death even b4 he was buried that they started fighting for it, infact stella is a good woman, some women would have shown the family extra pepper, and in such a case i support



@morenike

this is the pic

Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by Nobody: 5:25pm On Jun 02, 2009
,amebo no1:

@morenike

this is the pic
Thanks, so they want to take her children from her?
That's below the belt, you don't think it's going to happen, do you?
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by amebono11: 11:38pm On Jun 02, 2009
yes they wanted to take her kids and money from her, if a man deemed it fit to marry her, then why on earth will she not be named the next of kin

i seriously did not believe JJYOU will post that kind of reply, if you preach togetherness, if you preach a man and a woman becoming one, if you preach ' what belongs to my partner belongs to me and vice versa'  on dis forum, then why on earth are u supporting families taking their daughter inlaws inheritance from her

seriously JJYOU undecided
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by JJYOU: 10:27am On Jun 03, 2009
,amebo no1:

yes they wanted to take her kids and money from her, if a man deemed it fit to marry her, then why on earth will she not be named the next of kin

i seriously did not believe JJYOU will post that kind of reply, if you preach togetherness, if you preach a man and a woman becoming one, if you preach ' what belongs to my partner belongs to me and vice versa'  on dis forum, then why on earth are u supporting families taking their daughter inlaws inheritance from her

seriously JJYOU undecided
seriously, calm down my dear. you know the law was meant to protect sensible people like you.  i will bend every rule to protect you but you know there are some out there who dont cover our backs like you do.  i used to get nasty mails for being a women right advocate so i wear my badge with honour.  laws are always meant for the lawless not the lawfull.

i did not  read a line of anything she said in the interview. i was replying outstrips comment 
I also like how she used the interview to put the word out there to Nigerian women. Do not be a fool. [b]Make sure all your husband has is also in your name.[/b] I don't understand how a man can die and then his family members will shamelessly come and fight for something that does not belong to them. Even in 2009.

you know i am not a big fan of the celebrity culture. i think there was a thread about this girl and her late husband family on this same issue on NL  last year  last year.  i firmly believe there are 2 sides to every stories.  that was why i asked the question
is there a law that states if you married in court the family cant take your kids from you if they want?
  the nigeria i know is where you can do anything and get away it.  pls help me out cos i didnt know families can take kids from mothers.  i would have thought this family could take anything from her if they really wanted to. i may be wrong. 

can i state too that i dont know the aboderins personally but i think they would be comfortable enough to still be fighting for things like has been alledged.  i tot i read somewhere last year she was too poor to grieve the guys death so has to go back to work quickly so what assets is the family trying to grab from her?.

i restate my submissions again

in most nigeria's customs it is the kids that inherits the wealth.
look into why families ( sadly mostly women) take properties from bereaved women.
i am all for fairness but i am seriously against women taking family wealth because she has a pair of child bearing hips
our customs generally dont allow room for indiviluality it is always family.

i dont know how it happens in your part of the world where i come from a wife or the husband dont inherit. family wealth is passed to the next generation for continuation of the family name and wealth. the idea is never to take the wealth from the wife or kids but keep it in the family.

i know the celebrity worshipping generation wants to re-write the rules i firmly believe we will live to regret the harvest. 
you know i still love you.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by amebono11: 12:26pm On Jun 03, 2009
and what if the kids are still little wat happens? ofcourse the family members will take over undecided  WTF undecided undecided

a man never writes his wife off the will

yes the wealth must remain in the family,let me ask u again, is the wife not family? undecided this laws of yours are baseless JJYOU

passed on to kids, wat if the man had only girls, and no man, wouldnt it be more terrible that the female kids will be passing it on to their husband and his family, after ' marriage' ? undecided

most of the things my husband does or buys, he uses my name for it, and dats how its supposed to be

infact i am the next of kin if anything happens, and i repeat again, dats how its supposed to be
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by JJYOU: 1:58pm On Jun 03, 2009
,amebo no1:

and what if the kids are still little wat happens? ofcourse the family members will take over undecided  WTF undecided undecided

a man never writes his wife off the will.  where did you get the notion of men writting off wife from will in my post?

yes the wealth must remain in the family,let me ask u again, is the wife not family? undecided this laws of yours are baseless JJYOU

passed on to kids, wat if the man had only girls, and no man, wouldnt it be more terrible that the female kids will be passing it on to their husband and his family, after ' marriage' ? undecided by this you mean a husband can never be a family member it has to be the wives only club.  not even you makes this kind of one sided case

most of the things my husband does or buys, he uses my name for it, and dats how its supposed to be.  why is this so? can i suggest your husband does this because he trust you 100% a luxury most men dont have.

infact i am the next of kin if anything happens, and i repeat again, dats how its supposed to be
why is this a fighting matter for us here? i am not a member of the husband family.  you guys do whatever suits you best.  as i said earlier you have to dig into inheritance laws in africa to know why they are so.  they were not made for here today gone tomorrow marriages or celebrity marriages.  no society survives on anarchy and lawlessness like we have now.

you are assuming most men die before thier wives so saying a daughter inheriting the fathers wealth makes it go to the husband is the same argument against a widow inheriting in the first place as in just in case she goes to marry again. 

there are no fixed cross cultural rules on these things.  you know i believe we should all look after our partners in life and from beyond but i do believe we remove the controls of the families over the estate of the deceased at our peril. it is so easy to come on nairaland and ask for one 2/3 bed room house with its mortgage debts and liabilities to be inherited by the wife.

by the way apart from films have you seen any family throwing the wife and kids away from their fathers house?  in my almost 50yrs i have never seen one.

can i ask for all the throw away this and that  custom you guys continually shout for what are you guys planning to replace the family with? facebook, beebo and NL freinds or what?  i am asking becos i am begining to get curious cos having lived in a society that threw away what it had and seeing the repercurtions in emptiness and loneliness i am not very excitted about throwing away what we have as in family structures just yet.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by jaybaby(f): 7:34pm On Jun 03, 2009
cheesy Gosh!---ll surely get back to read it--Dang its 2 Long!
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by AloyEmeka9: 9:14am On Jun 04, 2009
hope Stella doesnt keep people waiting too long for her husband's photo sha.
What are you doing with her husband's picture? You want to know whether he is your runaway baby daddy?. Why not post yours here instead of waiting for stellato post the picture of her husband #2?.
Re: The Man Whose Photo Was Published Isn't My Husband. . . . . Stella Damascus by JJYOU: 9:20am On Jun 04, 2009
Aloy.Emeka:

What are you doing with her husband's picture? You want to know whether he is your runaway baby daddy?. Why not post yours here instead of waiting for stellato post the picture of her husband #2?.
trouble maker. you are something else.

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