The matriarch of the Awolowo family, Chief (Mrs.) Hannah Dideolu Awolowo, fondly called HID, has passed on, aged 99.
Awolowo,
wife of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, died, yesterday, at 3:15
pm, two months to her centenary birthday. She was said to have passed on
after she held a meeting with her family members on the plan for her
100 years birthday.
Announcing the demise, her eldest child,
Omotola Oyediran, in a statement she signed on behalf of the family,
said “mama died while praying for her children over her planned
centenary birthday”.
The statement read: “Mama died as glorious
as she lived. She spent the day in the company of her children, grand
children, great grand children and close family. She shared a precious
few minutes with them when she went in to pray for them as they met to
plan her centenary birthday.
“They sang her a befitting song as
she came in and she continued to pray for them. She died a couple of
hours later as she had always wished to be surrounded by her children,
grand children and great grand children.”
The first callers to
the Ikenne, Ogun State family house of the Awolowos include Secretary to
the State Government, Mr. Taiwo Adeoluwa; the deputy governor, Yetunde
Onanuga; a former governor of the state, Otunba Gbenga Daniel and
Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s wife, Olufunsho.
HID, once described
by his late husband as his Jewel of Inestimable Value, was born on
November 25, 1915 in Ikenne. A successful businesswoman and astute
politician, she was the First Lady of the old Western Region when
Awolowo was Premier in the First Republic. During the crisis in that
political dispensation, she stood in for her husband in the alliance
between the NCNC and the AG, called the United Progressive Grand
Alliance (UPGA), while he was tried and jailed.
HID toured the
country with her husband in the Second Republic when Awolowo sought to
be President on the platform of Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN). She also
coordinated the women’s wing of the UPN. A businesswoman, she became the
first Nigerian distributor for the Nigerian Tobacco Company (NTC) in
1957. She was the first to import lace materials and other textiles into
Nigeria.
She is blessed with five children, 20 grand children and 32 great grand children.
She
was the Yeye Oodua of Yorubaland, bestowed on her by the late Ooni of
Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade, and a recipient of the national award of the
Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON).
HID was very close to
her late husband who she on an occasion described as a loving, caring
and affectionate partner, noting that he would continue to be remembered
for his uprightness.
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