Lami Fatima Babare, my beloved wife, my friend, the
mother of my children. Today marks one week of your painful death. When we got
married on the 30th of October, 1992, our dream was to grow old together; to
live to the age when we will walk about alone in the house with walking sticks
after sending all the children on their course, reliving our early love once
again, with our grandchildren, great grandchildren and more to give us some
fulfilment after the long struggle to prepare our children for their life’s
journey.
But He who created you from my rib for me knew you
would leave me in the cold night of 6th of March, just three days after your
52nd birthday.
You sang and danced for me, bringing laughter to my
life and our home. You made me excel because I wanted to be your king. My life,
too, revolved around you. Everything I did was for you, because of you, or in
consideration of you.
You were always there for me; in your eyes I was the
father and mother you didn’t have. I was your husband, friend and brother too.
Your love was genuine and so was your submissiveness to my authority as your
husband.
When you were diagnosed with cervical cancer over a
year ago, it was a rude shock to us. You knew, we all knew, it was just a
matter of time. It became debilitating for the month you remained bedridden as
the unmerciful disease ate up your insides.
From Tuesday, 6th of February to Monday, 5th of March
when you finally gave up the ghost, it had been from one hospital to another
and one surgery after another. Yet you were always full of praise to your
creator. I witnessed this because I was always with you, by your side all the
days.
I recall when you were to undergo a procedure called
Bilateral Nephrostomy in which tubes were inserted into your left and right
sides to empty your bowels as your kidneys’ functions had been impaired. We
held hands by the hospital theatre entrance and your words were ‘Allah abun
godiya’.
You were submissive to His will and struggled on, with
strength. All of us who saw you were all the time in tears but not a drop of it
from your large, beautiful, enchanting eyes. You were a woman with all the
attributes of women but your strength was the envy of men, and my source of
strength and confidence.
You put up a gallant fight for your life, but death is
an inescapable foe. It does its work at the time given to it by the creator. No
one escapes their appointed time.
You achieved a lot. You made me a man, always a source
of comfort to me and a pillow that cushioned my heart.
You gave birth to, and nurtured, six wonderful
children, one of whom became a lawyer at 22 while three are at various levels
in the university. You have left behind two beautiful grandchildren from your
first daughter.
We all will miss you. Your friends will miss you. Your
relations will miss you. Mine will miss you. Your students at FCE (T), Potiskum
will miss you.
FCE (T) Potiskum is where you served diligently as a
lecturer for 27 years without a query or reprimand of any kind and you rose to
become a senior lecturer and deputy director of its remedial programme. You
were also a dedicated unionist.
Even though neither the college’s management nor the
COEASU executive sent a delegation to visit you on your death bed, I know that
you have forgiven them because you were large hearted, generous, gentle and
forgiving by nature.
I have been in tears since you left me but the tears
are not for you; you are in a better realm now. The tears are for me. Your
death has opened me up because the foundation on which my life was built was
you. I now realise my home is no longer like home, because you were my home.
Because you were there, I could afford to move about
in the world in a carefree way, knowing that you got my back. It is now a new
era for me. There is no time, but I have to start again. One’s first marriage
is generally one based on sincere love because it’s generally effected by
contributions from family and friends. Any other after is because one can. One
cannot replicate with any other what one has done with the first wife.
My only regret is that I did not take a photograph
with you on your sick bed. There was always a sort of shyness between us; with
you sometimes I behaved like a child in front of his mother. Perhaps I didn’t
want to think I was taking the pictures as a way of saying good bye. And there
was always that reserve of hope, however faint, that anything – positive –
could happen with your case.
I also regret not snapping you when you lay lifeless.
I touched your face tenderly, closed your slightly parted lips, but it never
occurred to me to take that physical snapshot, but that picture will remain
indelible in my mind’s eyes.
As the curtains are drawn on your worthy, earthly
life, a life well spent, I eagerly look to a reunion under the shades of the
trees of Paradise so that we continue from where we stopped, where I will enjoy
again the endless laughter from your sweet voice.
I know you are there. If your Paradise were under my
feet, then you have no problem because I had raised those feet to make way for
you the day I married you. It is left for me to do what will make me meet you
where you are waiting for me, by living well. Thank God there is a meeting
place. If there was none, I wouldn’t know how to take what has happened. It
would have been too much for my poor heart.
Till we meet there to part no more, my darling wife,
in shaa Allah, Lami.
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