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The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Komolafe89: 5:45pm On Dec 14, 2020
Adieu to a Yoruba, Muslim Princess

I will start with a footnote on the billionaire Bishop, David Bello Oyedepo. He was born a Muslim, named Hasan by his father Bello Oyedepo. His mother was a Christian who converted to Islam when she married Bello. Bello had three other wives. After his higher education, Hasan became David. He instantly became a strong, aggressive and successful Christian activist. With his stupendous wealth, he reverted his mother to Christianity; then his father and brothers; then all except his three stepmothers who stuck to their guns and died Muslims. The last of them—Aasiyat— is the subject matter of this piece.

I set out searching for her in late 2013 when I read about how Bishop Oyedepo allegedly prophesized that she will die a miserably poor woman unless she converts to Christianity, like most other members of his family. Muslims on social media were shocked by the Bishop’s utterances.

After reading about her, I set out to meet her in 2013. I visited the headquarters of the Living Faith Church in Iyana Apaja, Lagos. Someone in a nearby mosque told me that the native home of the Oyedepos is in Omuaran, Kwara State. I drove to Ilorin the following morning and arrived Omuaran during Juma’ah congregation. After the prayer, I met the leaders of the mosque, introduced myself and asked about “Bishop Oyedepo’s sister who refused to convert to Christianity.” They became sceptical and started to interrogate me. They even brought a Fulani herder to confirm that I was indeed Fulani.

Finally, I was handed over to one brother, Bello Saad Bamidele, with whom we drove a short distance before arriving at the Oyedepo family house. Behind the front block was a flat in which a woman in her sixties was living. Bello entered and announced our arrival. After she was ready, I was ushered into her parlour. She was shy, full of smiles, but few words. She spoke only Yoruba; so Bello was very handy at the time and on my subsequent visits to her.

I did not want to open fresh wounds especially giving her shy nature; so I avoided asking her about her relationship with David. Instead, we focussed on Islam. I told her that it saddens other Muslims to learn about the pressure on her to convert to Christianity and salute her resolve to remain Muslim. I expressed the solidarity of other Nigerian Muslims with her and recounted the testimony that God gave about her namesake, the wife of Pharaoh, who kept her faith in the face of difficulties and, before God, became a symbol of faith who prayed to Him for a house in Heaven and rescue from Pharaoh and oppression.

Before I left her that afternoon, I asked Aasiyat if she had a request before the Muslim Ummah. She smiled and dropped her head for a while. Finally, when she gathered the courage to open up, she giraffed and whispered into the ear of Bello, who, having heard her request, shouted Allahu akbar! “What did she say,” I enquired, impatiently. He said, “She will love to fulfil her lifetime ambition—a pilgrimage to Mecca.” Look! She did not ask for money. Not a house or anything material. But just a spiritual journey. I told her that it was a modest request and we will pray that God grants it..

Alhamdulillah. He did. By the time the Hajj season commenced in 2014, I got in touch with a great sister, Fatima Afolore Jimoh, the then Secretary of the Pilgrims Board in Ilorin. She assured me of a seat and helped a lot to see that things went well. I linked her up with Bello in Omuaran and all arrangement were completed. The scheme nearly got k-legged when Aasiyat’s sons and other family members discovered she would travel to Mecca. They started agitating against it but we were faster, alhamdulillah. � We quickly ‘abducted’ Aasiyat from Omuaran, shipped her to Ilorin and hid her in a house until her day of departure to the Holy Land. Kudos to Fatima. What a great sister she is!

Aasiyat performed her hajj successfully without any hitch and returned from Mecca a very happy Muslim. She was all smiles when I visited her. She held a ceremony, thanking God for that. The Muslim community of Omuaran continued to support her especially when she fell sick lately. When we spoke last Monday, Saad told me she has recovered from a severe sickness. This morning, he told me that she relapsed and taken to a hospital in Ibadan, where she died last night. The most interesting part was that she was blessed with the Kalimah as her last word. Mashaallah!

And so was the end, here, for her. I salute her resolve to live by her conviction as I saluted the Boko Haram abducted girl—Liya Sharibu—who refused to convert to Islam as demanded by her captors. Aasiyat and the two cowives that died before her chose to remain Muslim. That is the power of conviction. She would have succumbed to the pressure from her two sons—surely the dearest to her heart—both of whom are now pastors, converted to Christianity by Bishop Oyedepo. No. She chose God over man and the Hereafter over the temporary glitters of this world. She died committed to her choice, a symbol of faith and conviction.

Sister Aasiyat Bello Oyedepo, the Princess of Islam, will be buried tomorrow afternoon in her native town of Omuaran. Our sincere condolences go to the Muslim community of Omuaran and Kwara State in general, to all those who anchored her in faith, including Bello and Sister Fatima. Our condolences also to the Oyedepos, including the Bishop David. May he soon revert to Hasan before he leaves the glitters of this world behind. Amin yaa Rabb! � Nothing is beyond Him.

May the Princess of the Faithful, Aasiyat, meet in Heaven the symbols of faith—her namesake and Virgin Mary—where they will together dwell in the gardens and rivers which their Lord promised the righteous:

“Lo! The righteous will dwell among gardens and rivers.
Firmly established in the favour of a Mighty King.” (54:54-55)

Dr. Aliyu U. Tilde
Bauchi
13 December 2020

24 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by itsme01: 5:53pm On Dec 14, 2020
cry



Masha Allah


Inalilai wa Ina lilahi rajihun


Heard of her story a while back and I truly respect her courage and personal conviction to stay true to her faith, at some point she was a petty trader in Lagos and people described her as happy and and contended


.

18 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by heniford2: 5:56pm On Dec 14, 2020
may soul rest in peace

3 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by itsme01: 5:56pm On Dec 14, 2020
Osaze007:
Why are non Yorubas so obsessed with inciting Yorubas based on religious lines
Igbos will attack yoruba Muslim
Arewa will attack yoruba christains
Lool
What type of nonsense write up is this and painting oyedepo in bad light

Nothing inciting here... I am a Yoruba man and I have known of this story long time, Oyedepo never hid it


You can either forget about the religion in the story and pick up some morals , inspiration and courage or stick to the religious irrelevant angle of the story

This is also similar to the option Balarabe Musa had to go through. Change the budget or get impeached... He didn't change the budget, got impeached and went back to his village happily has a farmer,



.

29 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Moferere: 5:59pm On Dec 14, 2020
If there is anything I achieved in 2020.

Nobody can use religion to deceive me again.

31 Likes 4 Shares

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by madridguy(m): 5:59pm On Dec 14, 2020
May Allah accept her soul. Amin

12 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by LukasPodolski: 6:01pm On Dec 14, 2020
May her soul continue to rest in peace.

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by SamNaijaboy: 6:04pm On Dec 14, 2020
This is just hilarious.
Is this writer trying to say Christians won't be in heaven while Muslims will?
He wrote " Our condolences also to the Oyedepos, including the Bishop David. May he soon revert to Hasan before he leaves the glitters of this world behind"
He is better served finding his own way to heaven than advocating for a man of God to revert to Islam. Nigeria is full of thieving religious dullards who are more righteous than their actions. Leave others to convert their family members as they will. And leave Yoruba people alone in their fluidity between the religions. They are not fanatic like the Easterner and the Northerners. They see humanity first.


Komolafe89:
Adieu to a Yoruba, Muslim Princess

I will start with a footnote on the billionaire Bishop, David Bello Oyedepo. He was born a Muslim, named Hasan by his father Bello Oyedepo. His mother was a Christian who converted to Islam when she married Bello. Bello had three other wives. After his higher education, Hasan became David. He instantly became a strong, aggressive and successful Christian activist. With his stupendous wealth, he reverted his mother to Christianity; then his father and brothers; then all except his three stepmothers who stuck to their guns and died Muslims. The last of them—Aasiyat— is the subject matter of this piece.

I set out searching for her in late 2013 when I read about how Bishop Oyedepo allegedly prophesized that she will die a miserably poor woman unless she converts to Christianity, like most other members of his family. Muslims on social media were shocked by the Bishop’s utterances.

After reading about her, I set out to meet her in 2013. I visited the headquarters of the Living Faith Church in Iyana Apaja, Lagos. Someone in a nearby mosque told me that the native home of the Oyedepos is in Omuaran, Kwara State. I drove to Ilorin the following morning and arrived Omuaran during Juma’ah congregation. After the prayer, I met the leaders of the mosque, introduced myself and asked about “Bishop Oyedepo’s sister who refused to convert to Christianity.” They became sceptical and started to interrogate me. They even brought a Fulani herder to confirm that I was indeed Fulani.

Finally, I was handed over to one brother, Bello Saad Bamidele, with whom we drove a short distance before arriving at the Oyedepo family house. Behind the front block was a flat in which a woman in her sixties was living. Bello entered and announced our arrival. After she was ready, I was ushered into her parlour. She was shy, full of smiles, but few words. She spoke only Yoruba; so Bello was very handy at the time and on my subsequent visits to her.

I did not want to open fresh wounds especially giving her shy nature; so I avoided asking her about her relationship with David. Instead, we focussed on Islam. I told her that it saddens other Muslims to learn about the pressure on her to convert to Christianity and salute her resolve to remain Muslim. I expressed the solidarity of other Nigerian Muslims with her and recounted the testimony that God gave about her namesake, the wife of Pharaoh, who kept her faith in the face of difficulties and, before God, became a symbol of faith who prayed to Him for a house in Heaven and rescue from Pharaoh and oppression.

Before I left her that afternoon, I asked Aasiyat if she had a request before the Muslim Ummah. She smiled and dropped her head for a while. Finally, when she gathered the courage to open up, she giraffed and whispered into the ear of Bello, who, having heard her request, shouted Allahu akbar! “What did she say,” I enquired, impatiently. He said, “She will love to fulfil her lifetime ambition—a pilgrimage to Mecca.” Look! She did not ask for money. Not a house or anything material. But just a spiritual journey. I told her that it was a modest request and we will pray that God grants it..

Alhamdulillah. He did. By the time the Hajj season commenced in 2014, I got in touch with a great sister, Fatima Afolore Jimoh, the then Secretary of the Pilgrims Board in Ilorin. She assured me of a seat and helped a lot to see that things went well. I linked her up with Bello in Omuaran and all arrangement were completed. The scheme nearly got k-legged when Aasiyat’s sons and other family members discovered she would travel to Mecca. They started agitating against it but we were faster, alhamdulillah. � We quickly ‘abducted’ Aasiyat from Omuaran, shipped her to Ilorin and hid her in a house until her day of departure to the Holy Land. Kudos to Fatima. What a great sister she is!

Aasiyat performed her hajj successfully without any hitch and returned from Mecca a very happy Muslim. She was all smiles when I visited her. She held a ceremony, thanking God for that. The Muslim community of Omuaran continued to support her especially when she fell sick lately. When we spoke last Monday, Saad told me she has recovered from a severe sickness. This morning, he told me that she relapsed and taken to a hospital in Ibadan, where she died last night. The most interesting part was that she was blessed with the Kalimah as her last word. Mashaallah!

And so was the end, here, for her. I salute her resolve to live by her conviction as I saluted the Boko Haram abducted girl—Liya Sharibu—who refused to convert to Islam as demanded by her captors. Aasiyat and the two cowives that died before her chose to remain Muslim. That is the power of conviction. She would have succumbed to the pressure from her two sons—surely the dearest to her heart—both of whom are now pastors, converted to Christianity by Bishop Oyedepo. No. She chose God over man and the Hereafter over the temporary glitters of this world. She died committed to her choice, a symbol of faith and conviction.

Sister Aasiyat Bello Oyedepo, the Princess of Islam, will be buried tomorrow afternoon in her native town of Omuaran. Our sincere condolences go to the Muslim community of Omuaran and Kwara State in general, to all those who anchored her in faith, including Bello and Sister Fatima. Our condolences also to the Oyedepos, including the Bishop David. May he soon revert to Hasan before he leaves the glitters of this world behind. Amin yaa Rabb! � Nothing is beyond Him.

May the Princess of the Faithful, Aasiyat, meet in Heaven the symbols of faith—her namesake and Virgin Mary—where they will together dwell in the gardens and rivers which their Lord promised the righteous:

“Lo! The righteous will dwell among gardens and rivers.
Firmly established in the favour of a Mighty King.” (54:54-55)

Dr. Aliyu U. Tilde
Bauchi
13 December 2020

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by GogetterMD(m): 6:11pm On Dec 14, 2020
Masha Allah. Alhamdulillah for a good life lived by Alhaja Aasiyah Oyedepo.

Brother Hassan, sorry, David Oyedepo, I just dye take side eye take look you

3 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Nbotee(m): 6:11pm On Dec 14, 2020
U ppl are so pathetic and funny

9 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by GlorifiedTunde(m): 6:17pm On Dec 14, 2020
A human being will just sit down and concoct a lie from the pit of hell and then sell it to gullible readers who are ready to believe anything.

Are you jobless or useless?

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Okoroawusa: 6:27pm On Dec 14, 2020
Historically religion has killed more people than cancer and HIV/AIDS combined.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Okoroawusa: 6:29pm On Dec 14, 2020
Moferere:
If there is anything I achieved in 2020.

Nobody can use religion to deceive me again.
You have achieved the greatest gift a man can get.
I got it many years ago. You are lucky because we are very few on earth.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Enudapan: 6:39pm On Dec 14, 2020
Nah eh! No qualms
This is so unsophisticated
R.i.p
Say no to religion
Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Djamel(m): 6:54pm On Dec 14, 2020
SamNaijaboy:
This is just hilarious.
Is this writer trying to say Christians won't be in heaven while Muslims will?
He wrote " Our condolences also to the Oyedepos, including the Bishop David. May he soon revert to Hasan before he leaves the glitters of this world behind"
He is better served finding his own way to heaven than advocating for a man of God to revert to Islam. Nigeria is full of thieving religious dullards who are more righteous than their actions. Leave others to convert their family members as they will. And leave Yoruba people alone in their fluidity between the religions. They are not fanatic like the Easterner and the Northerners. They see humanity first.




Who will make heaven?

1 Like 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by juman(m): 7:13pm On Dec 14, 2020
Three suratul quraish to her.

Commendation to the author of the article.

2 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by ZACHIE: 7:15pm On Dec 14, 2020
GlorifiedTunde:
A human being will just sit down and concoct a lie from the pit of hell and then sell it to gullible readers who are ready to believe anything.

Are you jobless or useless?

Dr Tilde is not as vacuous as you seem to suggest.
Oga, search for yourself.
You

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by ZACHIE: 7:16pm On Dec 14, 2020
GlorifiedTunde:
A human being will just sit down and concoct a lie from the pit of hell and then sell it to gullible readers who are ready to believe anything.

Are you jobless or useless?

Dr Tilde is not as vacuous as you seem to suggest.
Oga, search for yourself.
You just might be the useless one here .

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Osaze007: 7:19pm On Dec 14, 2020
SamNaijaboy:
This is just hilarious.
Is this writer trying to say Christians won't be in heaven while Muslims will?
He wrote " Our condolences also to the Oyedepos, including the Bishop David. May he soon revert to Hasan before he leaves the glitters of this world behind"
He is better served finding his own way to heaven than advocating for a man of God to revert to Islam. Nigeria is full of thieving religious dullards who are more righteous than their actions. Leave others to convert their family members as they will. And leave Yoruba people alone in their fluidity between the religions. They are not fanatic like the Easterner and the Northerners. They see humanity first.


As in ! I can imagine if this was written in the context of an imam religion of peace would have stroke

3 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by lkillbrokehoes: 7:23pm On Dec 14, 2020
GlorifiedTunde:
A human being will just sit down and concoct a lie from the pit of hell and then sell it to gullible readers who are ready to believe anything.

Are you jobless or useless?
How do you know it's a lie? are you among the family member? smh

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by farouk2much(m): 7:27pm On Dec 14, 2020
may her gentle soul rest in paradise

2 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by RuddyFusion(m): 7:28pm On Dec 14, 2020
She died without Jesus...She knows better now

19 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Orjioorji(f): 7:36pm On Dec 14, 2020
No shame you kidnapped her from her village, you should be arrested by this testimony.if only she will be giving a chance to come back to life she will tell you how hell is without Christ Jesus

18 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by AsiwajuNdigbo: 7:39pm On Dec 14, 2020
May her soul rest in peace. The story is touching.
Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by sreamsense: 7:41pm On Dec 14, 2020
Komolafe89:
Adieu to a Yoruba, Muslim Princess

I will start with a footnote on the billionaire Bishop, David Bello Oyedepo. He was born a Muslim, named Hasan by his father Bello Oyedepo. His mother was a Christian who converted to Islam when she married Bello. Bello had three other wives. After his higher education, Hasan became David. He instantly became a strong, aggressive and successful Christian activist. With his stupendous wealth, he reverted his mother to Christianity; then his father and brothers; then all except his three stepmothers who stuck to their guns and died Muslims. The last of them—Aasiyat— is the subject matter of this piece.

I set out searching for her in late 2013 when I read about how Bishop Oyedepo allegedly prophesized that she will die a miserably poor woman unless she converts to Christianity, like most other members of his family. Muslims on social media were shocked by the Bishop’s utterances.

After reading about her, I set out to meet her in 2013. I visited the headquarters of the Living Faith Church in Iyana Apaja, Lagos. Someone in a nearby mosque told me that the native home of the Oyedepos is in Omuaran, Kwara State. I drove to Ilorin the following morning and arrived Omuaran during Juma’ah congregation. After the prayer, I met the leaders of the mosque, introduced myself and asked about “Bishop Oyedepo’s sister who refused to convert to Christianity.” They became sceptical and started to interrogate me. They even brought a Fulani herder to confirm that I was indeed Fulani.

Finally, I was handed over to one brother, Bello Saad Bamidele, with whom we drove a short distance before arriving at the Oyedepo family house. Behind the front block was a flat in which a woman in her sixties was living. Bello entered and announced our arrival. After she was ready, I was ushered into her parlour. She was shy, full of smiles, but few words. She spoke only Yoruba; so Bello was very handy at the time and on my subsequent visits to her.

I did not want to open fresh wounds especially giving her shy nature; so I avoided asking her about her relationship with David. Instead, we focussed on Islam. I told her that it saddens other Muslims to learn about the pressure on her to convert to Christianity and salute her resolve to remain Muslim. I expressed the solidarity of other Nigerian Muslims with her and recounted the testimony that God gave about her namesake, the wife of Pharaoh, who kept her faith in the face of difficulties and, before God, became a symbol of faith who prayed to Him for a house in Heaven and rescue from Pharaoh and oppression.

Before I left her that afternoon, I asked Aasiyat if she had a request before the Muslim Ummah. She smiled and dropped her head for a while. Finally, when she gathered the courage to open up, she giraffed and whispered into the ear of Bello, who, having heard her request, shouted Allahu akbar! “What did she say,” I enquired, impatiently. He said, “She will love to fulfil her lifetime ambition—a pilgrimage to Mecca.” Look! She did not ask for money. Not a house or anything material. But just a spiritual journey. I told her that it was a modest request and we will pray that God grants it..

Alhamdulillah. He did. By the time the Hajj season commenced in 2014, I got in touch with a great sister, Fatima Afolore Jimoh, the then Secretary of the Pilgrims Board in Ilorin. She assured me of a seat and helped a lot to see that things went well. I linked her up with Bello in Omuaran and all arrangement were completed. The scheme nearly got k-legged when Aasiyat’s sons and other family members discovered she would travel to Mecca. They started agitating against it but we were faster, alhamdulillah. � We quickly ‘abducted’ Aasiyat from Omuaran, shipped her to Ilorin and hid her in a house until her day of departure to the Holy Land. Kudos to Fatima. What a great sister she is!

Aasiyat performed her hajj successfully without any hitch and returned from Mecca a very happy Muslim. She was all smiles when I visited her. She held a ceremony, thanking God for that. The Muslim community of Omuaran continued to support her especially when she fell sick lately. When we spoke last Monday, Saad told me she has recovered from a severe sickness. This morning, he told me that she relapsed and taken to a hospital in Ibadan, where she died last night. The most interesting part was that she was blessed with the Kalimah as her last word. Mashaallah!

And so was the end, here, for her. I salute her resolve to live by her conviction as I saluted the Boko Haram abducted girl—Liya Sharibu—who refused to convert to Islam as demanded by her captors. Aasiyat and the two cowives that died before her chose to remain Muslim. That is the power of conviction. She would have succumbed to the pressure from her two sons—surely the dearest to her heart—both of whom are now pastors, converted to Christianity by Bishop Oyedepo. No. She chose God over man and the Hereafter over the temporary glitters of this world. She died committed to her choice, a symbol of faith and conviction.

Sister Aasiyat Bello Oyedepo, the Princess of Islam, will be buried tomorrow afternoon in her native town of Omuaran. Our sincere condolences go to the Muslim community of Omuaran and Kwara State in general, to all those who anchored her in faith, including Bello and Sister Fatima. Our condolences also to the Oyedepos, including the Bishop David. May he soon revert to Hasan before he leaves the glitters of this world behind. Amin yaa Rabb! � Nothing is beyond Him.

May the Princess of the Faithful, Aasiyat, meet in Heaven the symbols of faith—her namesake and Virgin Mary—where they will together dwell in the gardens and rivers which their Lord promised the righteous:

“Lo! The righteous will dwell among gardens and rivers.
Firmly established in the favour of a Mighty King.” (54:54-55)

Dr. Aliyu U. Tilde
Bauchi
13 December 2020

This your testimony get k-leg, perhaps, you have interior motive behind it or not, only God knows. But you need to understand that putting this online will make people view this thing in different perspective. First, you are talking about stepmothers here to Oyedepo; stepmothers always envy each other; she may choose to remain Muslim because of envy that a son to her other senior wife is successful and try to turn everybody in the family to Christianity so I will never become Christian.

Out of all family members, how come that only three step mothers to pastor oyedepo refused to turn to Christianity and choosed to die as muslims? They may do so out of envy or intrisinc jeleousy; and not necessarily because they love Islam. To you now, Aasiyat is in heaven thanking you for not leaving Islam, but what of if she is in heaven cursing you for being a stumbling block to her?

Don't you know two might be better than one atimes? For others including her husband and her children to have turned into Christianity, don't you think, they might have seen better than her and even you; for not turning back to Islam again ever since their conversion to christianity?

In your submission, you said Oyedepo prophesized that she will die a miserable poor woman. Question is weather she did or not? If she died as miserable poor woman, don't you think God of Oyedepo might be the true God? Don't you also think that Aasiyat might be cursing you and regretting how you misled her? You raised money for her just to go to Mecca, and not because she had her own personal money to go to Mecca, is that not poverty?

You said "Muslim community of Omuaran continued to support her especially when she fell sick lately"; it means she was poor for relying on other people to feed and survive; and she died suddenly due to sickness even when everybody thought she had recovered from her sickness. Is that not poor miserable death as prophesized? So, what gave you audacity that pastor Oyedepo and other family members that turned to Christianity didn't make better choice than her ?

For what pastor Oyedepo said openly to come to pass means he saw better, clearer and is so sure and confident of God that called him into Christianity. So, my brother, only God knows what we don't know, you don't even know whether she prayed and got conviction into Christianity before her last breath. You don't even know weather one of her children visited her, prayed with her and reminded her of why she should accept Jesus before her final death. Only God knows what happened at last minutes; that is why there will be surprises in heaven. Well, my brother, Aliyu, God will help us all and RIP to her!

35 Likes 5 Shares

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by creedencity(m): 8:28pm On Dec 14, 2020
RuddyFusion:
She died without Jesus...She knows better now
Little did you know son... she died with perfect faith in Jesus (PBUH) and what he (PBUH) truly stood for. Not some adulterated brouhaha you guys keep frolicking with in the name of xtianity

Orjioorji:
No shame you kidnapped her from her village, you should be arrested by this testimony.if only she will be giving a chance to come back to life she will tell you how hell is without Christ Jesus

Mr guardian of hell, na you send her there. I bet if she was given a chance to come back to life, her sole duty will be to be full of praise and a stern advice to G.Os to desist from misleading you lots from the right path.

5 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Uniquewise: 8:40pm On Dec 14, 2020
Komolafe89:
Adieu to a Yoruba, Muslim Princess

I will start with a footnote on the billionaire Bishop, David Bello Oyedepo. He was born a Muslim, named Hasan by his father Bello Oyedepo. His mother was a Christian who converted to Islam when she married Bello. Bello had three other wives. After his higher education, Hasan became David. He instantly became a strong, aggressive and successful Christian activist. With his stupendous wealth, he reverted his mother to Christianity; then his father and brothers; then all except his three stepmothers who stuck to their guns and died Muslims. The last of them—Aasiyat— is the subject matter of this piece.

I set out searching for her in late 2013 when I read about how Bishop Oyedepo allegedly prophesized that she will die a miserably poor woman unless she converts to Christianity, like most other members of his family. Muslims on social media were shocked by the Bishop’s utterances.

After reading about her, I set out to meet her in 2013. I visited the headquarters of the Living Faith Church in Iyana Apaja, Lagos. Someone in a nearby mosque told me that the native home of the Oyedepos is in Omuaran, Kwara State. I drove to Ilorin the following morning and arrived Omuaran during Juma’ah congregation. After the prayer, I met the leaders of the mosque, introduced myself and asked about “Bishop Oyedepo’s sister who refused to convert to Christianity.” They became sceptical and started to interrogate me. They even brought a Fulani herder to confirm that I was indeed Fulani.

Finally, I was handed over to one brother, Bello Saad Bamidele, with whom we drove a short distance before arriving at the Oyedepo family house. Behind the front block was a flat in which a woman in her sixties was living. Bello entered and announced our arrival. After she was ready, I was ushered into her parlour. She was shy, full of smiles, but few words. She spoke only Yoruba; so Bello was very handy at the time and on my subsequent visits to her.

I did not want to open fresh wounds especially giving her shy nature; so I avoided asking her about her relationship with David. Instead, we focussed on Islam. I told her that it saddens other Muslims to learn about the pressure on her to convert to Christianity and salute her resolve to remain Muslim. I expressed the solidarity of other Nigerian Muslims with her and recounted the testimony that God gave about her namesake, the wife of Pharaoh, who kept her faith in the face of difficulties and, before God, became a symbol of faith who prayed to Him for a house in Heaven and rescue from Pharaoh and oppression.

Before I left her that afternoon, I asked Aasiyat if she had a request before the Muslim Ummah. She smiled and dropped her head for a while. Finally, when she gathered the courage to open up, she giraffed and whispered into the ear of Bello, who, having heard her request, shouted Allahu akbar! “What did she say,” I enquired, impatiently. He said, “She will love to fulfil her lifetime ambition—a pilgrimage to Mecca.” Look! She did not ask for money. Not a house or anything material. But just a spiritual journey. I told her that it was a modest request and we will pray that God grants it..

Alhamdulillah. He did. By the time the Hajj season commenced in 2014, I got in touch with a great sister, Fatima Afolore Jimoh, the then Secretary of the Pilgrims Board in Ilorin. She assured me of a seat and helped a lot to see that things went well. I linked her up with Bello in Omuaran and all arrangement were completed. The scheme nearly got k-legged when Aasiyat’s sons and other family members discovered she would travel to Mecca. They started agitating against it but we were faster, alhamdulillah. � We quickly ‘abducted’ Aasiyat from Omuaran, shipped her to Ilorin and hid her in a house until her day of departure to the Holy Land. Kudos to Fatima. What a great sister she is!

Aasiyat performed her hajj successfully without any hitch and returned from Mecca a very happy Muslim. She was all smiles when I visited her. She held a ceremony, thanking God for that. The Muslim community of Omuaran continued to support her especially when she fell sick lately. When we spoke last Monday, Saad told me she has recovered from a severe sickness. This morning, he told me that she relapsed and taken to a hospital in Ibadan, where she died last night. The most interesting part was that she was blessed with the Kalimah as her last word. Mashaallah!

And so was the end, here, for her. I salute her resolve to live by her conviction as I saluted the Boko Haram abducted girl—Liya Sharibu—who refused to convert to Islam as demanded by her captors. Aasiyat and the two cowives that died before her chose to remain Muslim. That is the power of conviction. She would have succumbed to the pressure from her two sons—surely the dearest to her heart—both of whom are now pastors, converted to Christianity by Bishop Oyedepo. No. She chose God over man and the Hereafter over the temporary glitters of this world. She died committed to her choice, a symbol of faith and conviction.

Sister Aasiyat Bello Oyedepo, the Princess of Islam, will be buried tomorrow afternoon in her native town of Omuaran. Our sincere condolences go to the Muslim community of Omuaran and Kwara State in general, to all those who anchored her in faith, including Bello and Sister Fatima. Our condolences also to the Oyedepos, including the Bishop David. May he soon revert to Hasan before he leaves the glitters of this world behind. Amin yaa Rabb! � Nothing is beyond Him.

May the Princess of the Faithful, Aasiyat, meet in Heaven the symbols of faith—her namesake and Virgin Mary—where they will together dwell in the gardens and rivers which their Lord promised the righteous:

“Lo! The righteous will dwell among gardens and rivers.
Firmly established in the favour of a Mighty King.” (54:54-55)

Dr. Aliyu U. Tilde
Bauchi
13 December 2020

Rubbish post. Senselessness at its peak. So all this epistle just to tarnish Bishop Oyedepo's image that he did not take care of his sister, right? She made her choice as an adult, and no one should be blamed for that. You, poster, are just a rabble rouser, simple

This post should be deleted asap

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by sirqeeboi(m): 8:48pm On Dec 14, 2020
Christians saying she died without Jesus (pbuh)..if only u know how we believed in all the prophets and messengers of ALLAH then u know will believe in jesus than u christians.

Where did u Christians put all the remainings prophets and messengers of God. They were all here to deliver the words and messages of God to us including the last prophet and messenger of Allah (pbuh).

4 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Baba40(f): 8:57pm On Dec 14, 2020
Komolafe89:
Adieu to a Yoruba, Muslim Princess

I will start with a footnote on the billionaire Bishop, David Bello Oyedepo. He was born a Muslim, named Hasan by his father Bello Oyedepo. His mother was a Christian who converted to Islam when she married Bello. Bello had three other wives. After his higher education, Hasan became David. He instantly became a strong, aggressive and successful Christian activist. With his stupendous wealth, he reverted his mother to Christianity; then his father and brothers; then all except his three stepmothers who stuck to their guns and died Muslims. The last of them—Aasiyat— is the subject matter of this piece.

I set out searching for her in late 2013 when I read about how Bishop Oyedepo allegedly prophesized that she will die a miserably poor woman unless she converts to Christianity, like most other members of his family. Muslims on social media were shocked by the Bishop’s utterances.

After reading about her, I set out to meet her in 2013. I visited the headquarters of the Living Faith Church in Iyana Apaja, Lagos. Someone in a nearby mosque told me that the native home of the Oyedepos is in Omuaran, Kwara State. I drove to Ilorin the following morning and arrived Omuaran during Juma’ah congregation. After the prayer, I met the leaders of the mosque, introduced myself and asked about “Bishop Oyedepo’s sister who refused to convert to Christianity.” They became sceptical and started to interrogate me. They even brought a Fulani herder to confirm that I was indeed Fulani.

Finally, I was handed over to one brother, Bello Saad Bamidele, with whom we drove a short distance before arriving at the Oyedepo family house. Behind the front block was a flat in which a woman in her sixties was living. Bello entered and announced our arrival. After she was ready, I was ushered into her parlour. She was shy, full of smiles, but few words. She spoke only Yoruba; so Bello was very handy at the time and on my subsequent visits to her.

I did not want to open fresh wounds especially giving her shy nature; so I avoided asking her about her relationship with David. Instead, we focussed on Islam. I told her that it saddens other Muslims to learn about the pressure on her to convert to Christianity and salute her resolve to remain Muslim. I expressed the solidarity of other Nigerian Muslims with her and recounted the testimony that God gave about her namesake, the wife of Pharaoh, who kept her faith in the face of difficulties and, before God, became a symbol of faith who prayed to Him for a house in Heaven and rescue from Pharaoh and oppression.

Before I left her that afternoon, I asked Aasiyat if she had a request before the Muslim Ummah. She smiled and dropped her head for a while. Finally, when she gathered the courage to open up, she giraffed and whispered into the ear of Bello, who, having heard her request, shouted Allahu akbar! “What did she say,” I enquired, impatiently. He said, “She will love to fulfil her lifetime ambition—a pilgrimage to Mecca.” Look! She did not ask for money. Not a house or anything material. But just a spiritual journey. I told her that it was a modest request and we will pray that God grants it..

Alhamdulillah. He did. By the time the Hajj season commenced in 2014, I got in touch with a great sister, Fatima Afolore Jimoh, the then Secretary of the Pilgrims Board in Ilorin. She assured me of a seat and helped a lot to see that things went well. I linked her up with Bello in Omuaran and all arrangement were completed. The scheme nearly got k-legged when Aasiyat’s sons and other family members discovered she would travel to Mecca. They started agitating against it but we were faster, alhamdulillah. � We quickly ‘abducted’ Aasiyat from Omuaran, shipped her to Ilorin and hid her in a house until her day of departure to the Holy Land. Kudos to Fatima. What a great sister she is!

Aasiyat performed her hajj successfully without any hitch and returned from Mecca a very happy Muslim. She was all smiles when I visited her. She held a ceremony, thanking God for that. The Muslim community of Omuaran continued to support her especially when she fell sick lately. When we spoke last Monday, Saad told me she has recovered from a severe sickness. This morning, he told me that she relapsed and taken to a hospital in Ibadan, where she died last night. The most interesting part was that she was blessed with the Kalimah as her last word. Mashaallah!

And so was the end, here, for her. I salute her resolve to live by her conviction as I saluted the Boko Haram abducted girl—Liya Sharibu—who refused to convert to Islam as demanded by her captors. Aasiyat and the two cowives that died before her chose to remain Muslim. That is the power of conviction. She would have succumbed to the pressure from her two sons—surely the dearest to her heart—both of whom are now pastors, converted to Christianity by Bishop Oyedepo. No. She chose God over man and the Hereafter over the temporary glitters of this world. She died committed to her choice, a symbol of faith and conviction.

Sister Aasiyat Bello Oyedepo, the Princess of Islam, will be buried tomorrow afternoon in her native town of Omuaran. Our sincere condolences go to the Muslim community of Omuaran and Kwara State in general, to all those who anchored her in faith, including Bello and Sister Fatima. Our condolences also to the Oyedepos, including the Bishop David. May he soon revert to Hasan before he leaves the glitters of this world behind. Amin yaa Rabb! � Nothing is beyond Him.

May the Princess of the Faithful, Aasiyat, meet in Heaven the symbols of faith—her namesake and Virgin Mary—where they will together dwell in the gardens and rivers which their Lord promised the righteous:

“Lo! The righteous will dwell among gardens and rivers.
Firmly established in the favour of a Mighty King.” (54:54-55)

Dr. Aliyu U. Tilde
Bauchi
13 December 2020

Hate speech

5 Likes

Re: The Demise Of Pastor David Oyedepo's Muslim Sister Ashiyat by Oladeji245(m): 9:00pm On Dec 14, 2020
Okoroawusa:

You have achieved the greatest gift a man can get.
I got it many years ago. You are lucky because we are very few on earth.
though u are a certified and clueless zombie.. we agree in this one area

1 Like

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