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Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US - Christianity Etc (4) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralChristianity EtcRev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US (26101 Views)

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Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Rawdrill(m): 1:22pm On Jul 15
There's more to his death... Not just suicide because he's coming back to Nigeria, definitely he has chuck hands in something huge before heading down to US
nlfpmod:
https://punchng.com/nigerian-priest-in-us-dies-by-suicide-after-order-to-return-home/
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by BJanta: 1:27pm On Jul 15
He didn't want to return to Nigeria for fear of death, but it pleased him to give himself an irreversible one–way visa to hell. A priest ?!?!!? for that matter.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by toprealman:
Please always reach out to someone if you find yourself in such situation.
There are tons of better options available for him!
RIP brother.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by baby124: 1:32pm On Jul 15
voortrekker966:
Exactly @bolded. We underate what the white man did for black Africa. These guys left their homes, comfort and loved ones and came to the jungles of black Africa and died from diseases and sometimes through jungle justice and even their corpses buried here. But black African priests all want to run to the same white man's land to enjoy unlimited comfort.
Complete BS. Underrate what? Like the 10million killed by Belgium. Can you get out of Nairaland please. No African asked White people to comr to Africa.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by BJanta: 1:33pm On Jul 15
He didn't want to return to Nigeria for fear of death, but it pleased him to give himself an irreversible one–way visa to hellllll. A priest ?!?!!? for that matter.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Dafresh: 1:34pm On Jul 15
EKONGKING:
The priest might have developed panic attacks due to being posted in the region where ESN and IPOB are know to target catholic clergy.
This is the came situation among catholic clergy in Lagos also when they are being posted to east.

RIP father.
Even your Pale
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by georgeakins: 1:36pm On Jul 15
ednut1:
Should have crossed over to Canada na
A priest? Unless he's quitting priesthood.

He cannot go toi any country without a letter from his bishop in Nigeria to the other bishop in foreign country
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by CommonSense1967: 1:41pm On Jul 15
Ghaliz:
People would rather die than subject themselves to the numerous indignities of the Nigerian state.
He's scared of IPOB and ESN. He probably going to rot in hell for taking his own life just because of immigration problem.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by nairalanda1(m): 1:45pm On Jul 15
voortrekker966:
You've got valid points up there as the reasons for underdevelopment in Nigeria especially in areas of not paying for utilities and services and tax evasion. But remember Nigeria has large crude oil deposits but a few people are benefiting from the extraction and sales of it. Believe me, if Nigeria's natural resources was used for the good of the people, we would have gotten to the level where no one will want to use public utilities and services for free. Educated and employed people will be glad to give back to the government that took care of them. Is that the case in Nigeria and other black African countries?
Sorry, o, but I am tired of these 'Nigeria has a lot of natural resources' talk . I have heard it since my childhood, and I used to believe it.

But here is something we all learned in secondary school, resources are limited.Nigeria cannot make a good living from resources. Even without corruption. Nigeria can only make a good living when we use those resources to make goods the world needs.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Chibuezem(m): 1:49pm On Jul 15
nairalanda1:
Everyone has to pay a tax, it's how the saner climes have been doing for centuries even when it wasn';t benefiting them

Payment of tax is also the only way that people can be forced to hold their government to account.

Your revenue from oil and other raw materials will never be enough because the population is too large for them to sustain us, and we do not control the prices.

Infact your policy is what we have been doing since independence, and why we are broke and why corruption is rampant.
no I disagree with you Sir.
Revenue from oil and other resources will be more than enough.
If we agree on tax it should be paid by the rich and prosperous not the average Nigerian citizen.
Because saner climes don't have the same resources and problems we have.
Nigerian government so far has been by incompetent Nigerians who are greedy.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by nairalanda1(m): 1:56pm On Jul 15
Chibuezem:
no I disagree with you Sir.
Revenue from oil and other resources will be more than enough.
Revenue from oil and other resources at the moment can't reach 200 billion dollars. We need something close to about 600-800 billion dollars or more annually before we can live the life we want to live.

Also, again, we do not set the prices.

Note that I don't always say tax, I also say that we should , I repeat, we should, become an industrial nation, because if we use our resources to make exportable goods and services, we can control the price of what we sell, which would make us rich.

It's that simple.

Oil right now, even without corruption, cannot fund our economy adequately

NOTE THAT I DID NOT SAY CORRUPTION NO DEY. But it takes time to recover stolen money, and we need things right now.

Taxes, or we borrow and borrow , and borrow.
If we agree on tax it should be paid by the rich and prosperous not the average Nigerian citizen.
Because saner climes don't have the same resources and problems we have.
By everyone, not by the rich. We've tried the rich people pay more method for electricity. It's not working because the revenue is not enough to ofsett losses from the bands where people pay below cost reflective tarrifs.

By everyone. Fair is far. Rich can pay a higher rate than the poor.

We need to pay more in tax as a nation, otherwise we just keep shut when government borrows again.
Nigerian government so far has been by incompetent Nigerians who are greedy.
Sorry, but not this old line again. Not because it is not true, but because it has been said over and over again since independence...meaning you guys are not ready to remove them from office yet.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Idaytesj29(m): 1:56pm On Jul 15
Kobojunkie:
Dem tell you say na wetin dem dey use asylum for be that? undecided
What's it used for?
He had fear that he could be targeted for kidnapping and death if he returns. Why is asylum not appropriate for his situation Kobo? I never saw you as a junkie. But this response of yours....
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Kobojunkie: 2:00pm On Jul 15
Idaytesj29:
➜What's it used for? He had fear that he could be targeted for kidnapping and death if he returns. Why is asylum not appropriate for his situation Kobo? I never saw you as a junkie. But this response of yours....
Asylum is not a cure or treatment for panic attacks!🤔
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by ednut1(m): 2:04pm On Jul 15
georgeakins:
A priest? Unless he's quitting priesthood.

He cannot go toi any country without a letter from his bishop in Nigeria to the other bishop in foreign country
follow land border, file asylum lol
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Mrexcell(m): 2:05pm On Jul 15
Total waste of life and all that he learnt in all the years he spent to be a priest of God now he will be going to hell to join sinners who are killers, rapists, blasphemers etc while on earth, he has made the devil victorious over his life.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by billyG(m): 2:10pm On Jul 15
Am speechless so it has come to a stage some 9jerians prefer hell to living in an APC run 9ja cry cry cry
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by daniwise(m): 2:15pm On Jul 15
magicminister:
Imagine having a country so messed up that you’d rather commit suicide than leave another country where you’re an immigrant. Our political rulers all need to be hung and shot!! Including Tinubu!
You mean starting with Tinubu
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by nairalanda1(m): 2:23pm On Jul 15
AndroBlaze:
A Catholic priest committing suicide ... more evidence that the typical Nigerian takes whatever lucrative occupation is available to them!!
A lot of people are doing professions that they are not called to do, but they want to do for all sorts of mercenary reasons. And it's not only Nigerians.

There are probably a lot of clergy accross all religions and all doctrines who took the job because they were in a way far more interested in their comfort than they were in their living the life of sacrifice. And again, it's something that happens worldwide. Not just in Nigeria.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by manuelkel(m): 2:28pm On Jul 15
magicminister:
Imagine having a country so messed up that you’d rather commit suicide than leave another country where you’re an immigrant. Our political rulers all need to be hung and shot!! Including Tinubu!
It's unproved that he committed suicide. All these are just super stories. The American cops pinned it at that, you and I have no prove he committed suicide.
Also, I would never believe he committed suicide, never !!!!!
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by manuelkel(m): 2:31pm On Jul 15
Flangelo12:
The weakling should look for another excuse.

Rev Father wey dey commit suicide, that one na reverend?

Na them dey support Trump up and down.

E reach him turn na otapiapia e find.
You and I have no prove he committed suicide. Do you think he would commit suicide for such course ?? I don't think so, the American cops pinned it at that, %75 of such news in America whereby an African commits suicide is pinned falsely.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by jaxxy(m): 2:31pm On Jul 15
Where was his family, He didnt care about his family just himself and his issues.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by manuelkel(m): 2:32pm On Jul 15
Eriokanmi:
But why?Ministerial or missionary call isn't about comfort. A lot of western missionaries left their comfort zones,lived,died and were buried in most villages the in Nigeria where they served as missionaries.This one shock me.
Trump's immigration policies aren't forever. Shebi he'd have renewed his visa and returned later. After all,he didn't commit any criminal offence,which could have blocked his visa renewal process.
Nigerians should be calling for the USA government to be transparent with the cause of his death, also, there's %1 chance that man killed himself. I would never believe that. Never !!
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by manuelkel(m): 2:35pm On Jul 15
AndroBlaze:
A Catholic priest committing suicide ... more evidence that the typical Nigerian takes whatever lucrative occupation is available to them!!
Do you really believe that he committed suicide?? I would never believe that!! There's %1 chance for that, the U.S government should be transparent but of course na see finish because our government won't demand for transparency. That man was murdered.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Flangelo12: 2:38pm On Jul 15
manuelkel:
You and I have no prove he committed suicide. Do you think he would commit suicide for such course ?? I don't think so, the American cops pinned it at that, %75 of such news in America whereby an African commits suicide is pinned falsely.
It's possible, but I'm acting on the report.

I can't deny that as a possibility.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by clearcrystal: 2:41pm On Jul 15
emoneyrano:
Nigeria under tinubu is a cemetery with an uncompleted coastal road next to it


Nothing wrong in his decision
That's what Nigeria is to you and your family right?

To me Nigeria is a land flowing with milk and honey
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Great9japikin: 2:42pm On Jul 15
Nonsense; if that is actually the reason.

RIP.
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by nairalanda1(m): 2:44pm On Jul 15
Here's a more detailed report

Questions Linger After Nigerian Priest’s Suicide in Massachusetts


By Matthew McDonald

Massachusetts, 14 July, 2026 / 2:44 pm (ACI Africa).

A Catholic priest from Nigeria who killed himself in Massachusetts earlier this month was distraught over being unable to extend his stay in the United States and the recent death of the bishop of his home diocese, people who knew the priest told the Register.

The priest’s death has raised questions over what role the Trump administration’s visa restrictions may have played in the tragedy and over why he was so afraid to return to Nigeria.

Father Benjamin Madu, 54, who had served as a hospital chaplain and a weekend Mass celebrant for a parish collective on Cape Ann, died July 2, according to the Archdiocese of Boston, where he had ministered for the past five years.

Authorities had not released a cause of death as of Monday. But an email message an archdiocesan official sent priests 10 days ago on behalf of Archbishop Richard Henning and seen by the Register said the priest “tragically took his own life.”

A spokesman for the Essex County District Attorney’s Office told the Register the death is under investigation.

The priest’s visa allowing him to stay in the United States was due to expire on July 29, and the Diocese of Abakaliki leadership had directed Father Madu to return to Nigeria even earlier this month, according to the Archdiocese of Boston.

Bishop Ernest Obodo, an auxiliary bishop of a neighboring Nigerian diocese and the apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Abakaliki, told the Register he directed Father Madu to come home early so as not to overstay his visa and to give him an opportunity to rest and prepare for his new assignment in the diocese, which was due to start Aug. 4.

“We are still in shock and trauma processing the sudden death of our beloved priest, Fr Ben,” Bishop Obodo told the Register by email.

Feared Returning Home

Father Madu was usually easygoing and cheerful, but his outlook turned after the illness and April 10 death of Bishop Peter Nworie Chukwu, 60, who led Father Madu’s home diocese of Abakaliki, according to Curt Williams, a Congregationalist chaplain at Salem Hospital in Salem, Massachusetts.


“He was very sad, and it changed things for him. There was a level of trust there that he lost. It’s the first time he seemed upset about his future,” said Williams, who told the Register he spoke to Father Madu at least twice a week during the approximately year and nine months they worked together.

While Father Madu had family in Nigeria and would visit them for several weeks around Christmastime, he did not want to move back to Nigeria permanently, though a colleague and four parishioners who knew the priest all told the Register that he never said why.

As July approached, the prospect of returning home appeared to weigh heavily on Father Madu.

On June 14, the priest had a panic attack while driving to St. Joachim Church in Rockport to say Sunday Mass and ended up in the emergency room, he told parishioners at Mass the following week. Father Madu also announced during that June 21 Mass that he would be returning to Nigeria, telling parishioners that “his heart was shattered.”

During an 8:15 a.m. Mass at St. Ann’s in Gloucester that same day, parishioner Janine Boucher said, Father Madu shared that when he was scared as a child, his father would cough and clear his throat, which made him feel better.


“He was like a little boy up there, sharing all these things. And you felt for him,” said Boucher, 62, who attended the priest’s Mass at St. Ann’s Church in Gloucester. “I could feel that sadness and fear — complete fear.”

“This jolly, gentle man was sad. He was crying. He didn’t want to go home and die,” she said.

Paul F. Murphy, who often attended Masses celebrated by Father Madu at St. Joachim, described Father Madu’s death as “heartbreaking.”

I know people tried, present company included, to help get his visa extended, but his bishop was calling him home,” said Murphy. “But he was clearly scared to go home, and that bothers me greatly — that he had so much stress in his life.”

Some U.S. news reports, such as a July 3 story from The Boston Globe, have implied that Father Madu was afraid to return to Nigeria due to targeted violence against priests in the country. While people who knew Father Madu find that explanation plausible, they say he never mentioned kidnappings and violence or any other reason.



“I sensed he was afraid of something,” said George Lieser, 75, a parishioner who attends St. Joachim. “He never would communicate what it was.”

The Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria reported last year that 145 Catholic priests in the country were kidnapped (many for ransom) between 2015 and 2025, of whom 11 were killed, according to Agenzia Fides.

Violence against Catholic religious figures is less common in the heavily Christian southeast region of Nigeria where Father Madu came from compared to certain other parts of the country. Yet kidnappings have happened there, including in the Diocese of Abakaliki, where a priest and, later, a group of nuns and a seminarian were abducted (and later released) in 2023.

“There is insecurity in Nigeria but we are all going about our mission work with absolute trust in God. The insecurity is widespread in Nigeria but more dangerous in the North,” Bishop Obodo told the Register.

The Visa Problem

Father Madu was in the United States on a religious-worker visa, also known as a R-1 visa. The visa allowed him to stay in the country for five years while working for the Archdiocese of Boston, which in federal-government language was the “petitioner” for the priest, who is known as the “beneficiary.”

To stay in the United States beyond this month, the priest needed to obtain a second R-1 visa, which would have granted him up to five additional years. To get it, he would have had to leave the country first before applying
.

That process theoretically got easier in January 2026, when the Trump administration ended a requirement that R-1 visa beneficiaries wait 12 months before applying.

The development was welcomed by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, who have urged the Trump administration to streamline the R-1 visa process. Many U.S. dioceses depend on foreign priests for parish ministry.

But according to immigration lawyers who spoke to the Register, other recent changes made by the U.S. government have made the prospect of obtaining or renewing R-1 visas difficult for priests from Nigeria and certain other countries.

In December 2025, President Donald Trump added certain countries deemed “high risk,” with special restrictions on entry into the United States, including Nigeria. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services began what it calls a “hold and review” policy, pausing consideration of visa applications for beneficiaries from high-risk countries.

The Register spoke with Ogor Winnie Okoye, an immigration lawyer with an office in Lynn, Massachusetts, who was born in Nigeria and moved to the United States in her 20s. Okoye, who did not know Father Madu, said the federal government’s pause in considering visa applications for Nigerians has affected religious workers trying to come to the United States and likely affected Father Madu.

“It would have been an easy route for him if he left and there was no pause,” said Okoye, referring to the hold on processing visa applications. “A lot of things were just not working in his favor.


Entry into the United States on R-1 visas can be denied either by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in this country, by the U.S. consulate in the person’s home country, or by a U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer who interviews a foreign national at an airport or port of entry, said Lance Conklin, an immigration lawyer in Maryland who has been helping religious workers get visas for many years.

In recent years, he said, U.S. consulates (which are under the U.S. Department of State) have been the hardest for his clients to deal with in certain countries, including in Nigeria.

“R-1 visas in general have been denied in consulates. That’s always the risk anywhere. Nigeria is more problematic than most,” Conklin told the Register.

But Conklin, who did not know Father Madu, also said that the publicly known facts of his case don’t lend themselves to an easy interpretation.

“There’s nothing that’s obvious to me on what his issue was. It’s hard to know what it was,” Conklin said.

The Register contacted the press office of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services on Monday morning but did not hear back by publication of this story. The U.S. Department of State acknowledged a request for comment on Monday but did not provide one by publication of this story.

‘A Really Fine Man’

Father Madu had served as a chaplain at Salem Hospital, about a half-hour from Cape Ann, since May 2021. He began helping out at the parish collaborative on Cape Ann in April 2022, according to the church bulletin.

Parishioners told the Register that churchgoers initially had trouble understanding his accent when he first started saying Mass there, but that they got used to it and warmed up to him.

“He was a really, really fine man — gentle, great smile, loved interacting with people,” said Murphy, who serves as chairman of the elected board that oversees town government in Rockport.

Boucher recalled that Father Madu was gentle and quiet by nature, but he became “vibrant and enthusiastic” when he was proclaiming the Gospel or preaching.

Lieser said Father Madu got people singing during Sunday Mass.

“He was a sweet man who brought his culture, his faith — his simple, kind of joyous faith — to every Mass that he said. I loved his approach. He was genuine, and you knew he meant what he preached,” Lieser, a commercial mortgage banker, told the Register. “So he had a little touch of Southern Baptist revivalism. It was good for stodgy New Englanders.”

Williams, who worked alongside Father Madu at Salem Hospital, said Father Madu seemed overworked. Many Catholics go to Salem Hospital, Williams said, so the demand for the sacrament of anointing of the sick was heavy and emotionally draining, and the priest’s parish work during his time off from the hospital added to the stress.

“He was definitely not a complainer. But you’d see sometimes where he was tired,” Williams said. “He needed a break.”

‘Anger, Confusion’

Lieser said that after Father Madu’s June 21 announcement that he would be leaving the U.S., he offered to help assemble an immigration law team to help the priest extend his visa, but that he eventually declined.

“He said he would think about it, but he was reluctant,” Lieser recalled.

Some in the parish are angry about the visa problems Father Madu encountered before his death.

“As we mourn and pray for Father Ben, we must accept the awful truth that we are all responsible for this tragedy,” wrote Brother Patrick Garvey, a diocesan hermit who ministers in the parish, in the parish bulletin. “Father Ben deserved better from the Church. He deserved better from our country. He definitely deserved better from me. Maybe he deserved better from all of us.”

Lieser said the Archdiocese of Boston should have fought harder for the priest against the Trump administration’s restrictions on visas for Nigerians.

“It’s racist. It’s unjust. It’s wrong. And the diocese should stand up and say that,” Lieser said. “Maybe they did everything they really could do. I’m just not convinced.”

Terrence Donilon, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Boston, said the archdiocese did everything it could to help Father Madu.

“We tried everything humanly possible to help him stay in Massachusetts. We consulted with experienced immigration attorneys, we looked at the policy of the government that had changed, and we were simply met with the reality at every step he had to return to Nigeria,” Donilon told the Register by text.

Boucher, who captured the last known images of Father Madu via a cellphone video as he recessed out of Mass on June 21, told the Register on Tuesday that the priest’s death has dominated conversation at Janine’s Fitness, a business she runs in Rockport.

She also said that neither she nor the parishioners she has talked with are blaming U.S. immigration and visa restrictions for the priest’s death.

“We don’t know what really happened. May never know,” Boucher said. “But God knows.”
SOURCE
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by mukthar2000(m): 2:45pm On Jul 15
where he had served as a hospital chaplain and parish priest on Cape Ann since 2021.



Imagine since 2021 to 2026 still not enough for u to come back to ur own country.

Go they suffer panic attack for another papa country.

Kaii
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by Firstorderwizard(m): 2:48pm On Jul 15
That man will definitely be kidnapped if he comes back to Nigeria as per freshness and the tag of US returnee with dollars unless he is ready to walk around with at least two armed to the teeth body guard which is not possible for him.
Whether he will return alive from the kidnappers den is another topic



Babangidapikin:
People all over the world should respect us living in Nigeria ...for someone to chose the other realm to coming to stay in Nigeria. But a Priest , na wa o ..we are not a complete write off na ..
Re: Rev. Benjamin Okwy Madu Dies By Suicide After Being Ordered To Leave The US by manuelkel(m): 2:52pm On Jul 15
Flangelo12:
It's possible, but I'm acting on the report.

I can't deny that as a possibility.
No mate, the possibility is %1. The U.S local police are not being transparent with the cause of his death. I saw the update on a TV channel , and I told my fiancée, “look, this man was murdered.” the reports are logically evidential that the reverse is the case.
Nigerians and Nigeria government should be calling out the U.S government for transparency over the course of his death.
Unfortunately, Nigeria have lost her mights to request for transparency. It's unfortunate for his family not to get justice as well.
If he died from panic attacks they should pin it at that not twisting the narrative he committed suicide.
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