In this age of weird happenings and increasing violence and tragedies,
there are still some stories that bring sad tears to the eyes. One of
such heart-wrenching stories is that of Temitayo Omoniyi, a fresh
graduate of the University of Ibadan who studied English and Literary
Studies.
The 21-year-old, having passed out with flying colours, was posted to Ogun State for her National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).
Traveling
down to her university recently to collect her call up letter, she used
the opportunity to greet friends and members of the Redeemed Christian
Fellowship of which she was a member when she was on campus. Unknown to
the victim, she was mingling with friends and acquaintances for the last
time. By the next day, Saturday, March 3, while she was travelling home
to Ilesha in order to prepare for her trip to the NYSC camp in Sagamu,
Ogun State, she was involved in fatal motor accident. Sadly, after lying
in coma for one week in the hospital, she died on March 10, 2012.
After
her death, many of her friends and former colleagues who are still
reeling from the shock of her passage recounted the last 24 hours of her
life.
Akinremi Kehinde, one of her friends recalled their
few-minutes-encounter less than 24 hour before the tragedy. “On Friday, I
saw her at the Students Union building and we exchanged pleasantries. I
asked her where she’d been posted and she told me it was Ogun state. I
retorted jokingly that she “worked” it. She answered, saying “It is God
oh!”
Another friend, Akinoso Abiodun, a unit leader of the
Redeemed Christian Fellowship affirming that “the news of her death came
as a shock”, recalled that “on Friday we chatted before she travelled
to her home town (Ilesha).”
In tears, she described the deceased as “gentle, aspiring, nice and caring young woman.”
According
to Seye Joseph, “she called me on Friday evening that she had collected
her NYSC called up letter at University of Ibadan and was posted to
Ogun State. She said she will not be able to come to the Brand
Maximization seminar I organized for associations in the Polytechnic
Ibadan on Saturday. I said congratulations, God bless you, and I will
call you later. I could not call her in the night as I promised her
because I was very tired preparing for the seminar. Around 4:30 a.m., I
sent a message to her wishing her well in all her endeavours in life. By
6:39 a.m., she replied my text wishing me well on the programme.
Unfortunately, I never knew that will be our last conversation in life
and on earth.”
When the deceased was buried in her home town of
Ilesa, Osun State, on March 13, 2012, delegates from the Student Union,
the Redeemed Christian Fellowship and the Department of English attended
the burial to pay their last respect.
Many are still lamenting
the timing of her death. “After all the sufferings in school, after
graduating with flying colours, just at the time she was supposed to
begin to reap the fruits of her hard labour, it was then that death came
calling. It’s painful; it’s unfortunate, it’s not fair” a friend
lamented.
@e-express
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