Nigerian Artist Goldie Harvey’s Death: The Bitter Truth By Al-Faruq
This and many more of it happens in a country
wherein people get millions both in local and foreign currency for playing
football; a country wherein comedians shake hands with the President and women
who kiss strange men on camera in the name of acting take home National Award
and an immoral youth who made fame singing about his private part is given
special opportunity to interview the President in a desperate campaign strategy
because the thinking is that the community is populated by zombies and bimbos
who will vote in a PHD holder on the “honour” of a nuisance whose only
relevance to society, apart from lewd music, is competition in air and space.
Thus the question every sane Nigerian should be asking is when will this
madness of undeserved honour stop?
The death of the musician from Ekiti, Goldie
Harvey, and the attempt to make it seem like we lost an icon is another and
perhaps the worst of all these madness. I do not believe that death, which we
will all face, should make you a hero except you died an honourable death. When
people just drop dead we grieve and console the family not tell blatant lies as
to who they were. This is why the statement of the Ekiti State Governor is
worrisome. Mr. Kayode Fayemi is reported to have described Goldie as a “great
daughter of Ekiti State” and one has to wonder upon what was this greatness
achieved? Are people now great for singing meaningless songs with promiscuous
suggestions or for taking and publishing suggestive photos of themselves?
Since when did we consider it greatness to appeal
to the sexual cravings of perverts and run after men on camera in the name of a
reality show that is far from reality? Since when did it become great
achievement that a lady is even thought of as being a junkie in her life time?
How can this be great?
In the past fathers will tell their children “don’t
bring shame to this family” but nowadays shame and shamelessness is celebrated
with such noise that you think the Devil himself is in charge of people’s life and
even he has gone crazy.
Ironically, around the same period this unfortunate
death occurred Governor Theodora Orji of Abia State was commending Mrs.
Nwanyieze Prosper for winning the Purity Queen title for a lady who kept her
virginity until her marriage; surprisingly some Nigerians criticized the
Governor and even ‘accused’ him of giving her a car whereas Governor Kayode
Fayemi was praised for describing Goldie as a “bright star” among other
accolades including that she lived a “fulfilled life”. Indeed the world is
upside down.
The problem with giving honour to people who did
dishonourable acts is that people will definitely emulate them. The Dolly
Parton’s of this world made it a fashion for women to expose their cleavage;
years on women have lost their husbands to such exposure and homes have
collapsed; the Dr. Dre’s of this world made being “gangster” a fashionable
thing and years later the gangsters are increasing and we even have a gangster
in the White House killing innocent people with Drones…. Martin Luther’s dreams
became a Nightmare. And this list goes on and on; for every irresponsible
person you honour you make irresponsibility the “swag”, the same way for every
man who dies for his mother you honour you make standing up against oppression
and protecting the weak the in-thing…. make your choice.
Lastly, we must clarify two issues. The first one
is with regards to speaking “evil” about the dead while the second one is the
“who are you to judge” comedy.
Firstly, the dead has already met what he or she
put forward hence there is no need to speak of its evil. What there is need to
do however is to either call the living to an example to live by if the dead is
worthy of emulation or to warn the living to stay away from a wasteful
lifestyle like that of the dead who lived life as if death was never going to
come and this is the real lesson here; life is short, if you live it like
Goldie your death may come and meet you in that state; what will you tell your
Creator? We cannot pretend this is not the lesson here; it will be one lie too
many
Secondly, they ask us not to Judge and we say to
them since we are in the spirit of not judging kindly don’t judge the location
of your mouth so that you put your food in your nose. We say to them that in
this spirit of not judging please cross the road without judging that a vehicle
is close enough to knock you down; maybe when you are in the air you will
realise your stupidity.
We do not judge a person who has faith that he or
she will be in the hellfire, we do not Judge that the person’s bad is more than
his/her good, we do not Judge if God will forgive a believer…..but we judge
that fornication and the promotion of it is EVIL, and that the one who
represented evil dead does not make evil good.
Some others will say an adult can do what he or she
likes and you don’t have to force your life on others. The question we have for
this set of confused mentally colonized perverts is that this same
justification is given to homosexuality and it will soon be given to incest so
that if a grown up man and his grown up daughter say they fell in love and want
to marry your kind will say well it’s their life, it does not affect me…. can
you see now that you are sick?
Conclusively, the lessons from this unfortunate
incident can be summarized as thus;
1) Death can come at any time; be prepared to meet
your Lord.
2) Fame and fortunes are but illusions, what
matters is your relationship with your Creator.
3) The enjoyment of this world is fleeting; don’t
let it deceive you.
4) Live a good life; one that does not involve
promoting lewdness or any type of evil; death and Judgment is real and it is no
respecter of status.
5) It was the honour given her musical mentors that
led the lady to not just music but a meaningless form upon which her life ended
so let’s ensure that we do not turn scum into icons because people will sure
emulate them.
May God Almighty give the family fortitude to bear
the lost and guide them aright.
- This piece was originally published on RiseNetworks.org
Eseoghene Al-Faruq Ohwojeheri writes from Benin
City, Edo State.
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