Oluremi Tinubu, the wife of the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bola Ahmed, has revealed that she became a born-again Christian while she was in exile with her family in the United States.
Mrs Tinubu, Senator representing Lagos Central in the National Assembly, made this known in a recent interview on Television Continental (TVC) to celebrate her 60th birthday.
According to the lawmaker, the trauma of being alone with her little children in the US, without her husband, led her to Christ after one church to another.
Remi Tinubu also said she had to seek God’s guidance to handle the responsibilities of being the first lady of Lagos State at a young age.
“Like I said, if you get into a position you never envisage in your life time that you will ever occupy, you believe it is a privilege and God must have made you to become that. So you have to go back to God and ask ‘how do I do this,” she said.
“Thank God before I became the first lady, we were in self exile for almost five years and when you have problem, the only person you run to is God. So while I was in the US, I went to church, that was when I became born again.
“I went into exile as an Anglican, came out as a Pentecostal. I remember I was looking for God from one church to another, it was very difficult. When I came back, l had amnesia, I lost my memory, it was traumatic for me and that’s why I don’t like attending social gatherings because people walk up to me and I don’t recognise them anymore.
“It was traumatic for me because I was around 34, first time of being separated from your husband, and then you are stuck with two children with a lot of responsibilities.
“My husband couldn’t come see us until 18 months after. They locked them up for a while during the Abacha period and to see us, they have to go through neighbouring borders and the only passport he had was a diplomatic passport that couldn’t get him to UK because there were sanctions on diplomats because of June 12.
“He had to get to a neighbouring country to get their passport to come see us. Through that passport, he came to see us once every six months. But for me to raise the children to go to school, they were very young, it was traumatic for me. So to come back and become a first lady, it was something else.”
Tinubu, who is an ordained minister of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), said she has never experienced any conflict with her husband as regards their different faith.
“When I met my husband, I didn’t know it was a big deal. We’re from the Anglican Church. Then, a lot of Christians married Muslims. It was my sister that introduced us,” she said.
“One of the things that was profound for me, when we both went to see my dad, my dad asked him ‘are you a Muslim?, that was the first time I heard that. You’re a Muslim, I hope you won’t prevent my daughter from going to church and he promised not to.
“The point is he is quite respectful of my faith and if someone respects you it is quite right you show the same respect. He respects my faith, I respect his so there is no conflict.
“He doesn’t stop me from praying even if some pastors come around. He also has a lot of pastor friends that I met through him.
“My husband is very liberal when it comes to faith, being married to a Muslim I never had any problem. But when it is time for me to put on hijab during his events, I’ll do that but that doesn’t change my faith.
“He didn’t impose his faith on our children, I raise my children as Christians despite they bear Muslim names.”
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KanyiDaily recalls that Remi Tinubu had decried the rate at which youths of today are lazy, revealing that most of the youths in Lagos would come to her husband’s house, claiming “they want to enjoy Asiwaju’s money.”