Mrs. Mary Torkwase Antom, 58, from Tse Baraku in Kwande LGA of Benue
State, is probably the happiest woman on earth. Reason: her dream to
immortalise her husband and son’s names has been fulfilled, thanks to
what she considers the wise decision she took after the death of both
her son and husband.
A 1986 diploma holder in Catering and Hotel
Management from Benue State Polytechnic, Ugbokolo, she worked as a
caterer at the prestigious NICON-NOGA hotels in Abuja, between 1988 and
2001,
before resigning, to set up a booming restaurant business on
Makurdi Road in Lafia.
How she lost husband and sonFormerly
married to Mr. Patrick Terlumum Antom from Awe Local Government Area of
Nasarawa State and a retiree of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture
(they got wedded in 1980), the union was blessed with only one child,
Thomas Awuhe Antom. Born on June 13, 1990, the boy was in SS2 when he
died in 2004, from a heart-related sickness. A year later, his father,
Patrick, also died.
That left the woman devastated. “Growing old
is tough, but growing old without the support and company people close
to you is tougher,” she told Saturday Sun . Add to that the fact she is
diabetic and you begin to understand why she feels that life can never
be tougher than she had seen and may climb to “toughest” if she does not
do something drastic to secure not only the family name but also its
property.
“I had lived a happy life with my late husband,” she
explained. “We shared ideas and always kept our resources in one
account. We achieved a lot during his lifetime, we had very good plans
for our only son, but God took him away. To worsen matters, my husband
also died. We have a lot of landed property; we equally have business
establishments.”
Her worryMrs. Antom popularly
known as ‘Hajia Mary,’ said: “My worry is, when I die, who will take
over this property? My husband had, while on sick bed, warned me
seriously not to allow any of his relations to benefit from the property
that both of us had laboured strenuously to acquire. He was not in good
terms with them before he died.”
She was in a dilemma about how
to solve the problem she was confronted with when a friend told her
about a pretty young unmarried lady, one Miss Juliet Muese, from Obi LGA
who was on the verge of being disowned by her parents for her inability
to identify the guy responsible after becoming pregnant out of wedlock.
All of the three men she mentioned, one of whom is Igbo, denied ever
knowing her and even threatened to arrest her with the police for trying
to defame them.
Strange marriageOn learning
about the incident, Mrs. Antom became determined to seek Juliet’s hand
in marriage for her dead son, in keeping with Tiv tradition. She
travelled to Obi, met with and held a close and lengthy discussion with
members of Juliet’s family on that score. The idea was to bring her into
her home with high hope that she might deliver a baby boy who would
later inherit their property. With the parents of Juliet readily
agreeing to the marriage proposal after the long talks, Mrs. Antom
repeated the visit accompanied by some elders from her husband’s village
to perform the traditional marriage rites that would formally seal the
deal.
“What I did is a well-known practice in our place and
culture,” she said in defence. “There are a lot of children, almost 18
per cent of them born after their father’s death. Majority of them lost
their fathers before they were born, it is not a new thing, such cases
are everywhere in our place.
These children answer their
father’s name, some of them have even won local elections; they are
grown-up people today and nobody has said anything; they have gotten
their dues in our community, so my case is not an exception; all I need
is a grandchild and a bona fide inheritor of my property.”
The
marriage that took place in 2007 has produced two boys with the third
child on the way, although it is difficult at this stage to say whether
it is going to be a boy or a girl. To start with, Juliet was delivered
of a baby boy on December 1 of the same year. She became pregnant again
and was delivered of another baby boy in March 2011. Right now, she is
three-months pregnant for her third child.
Mrs. Antom who is
excited about the development told Saturday Sun that her husband and
son’s names that would have gone into extinction are now going to be
heard for a long time to come because they have somebody to answer to
them. While the first son is named after her late son, Thomas Awuhe, the
second son is named after her husband Patrick Terlumum.
“I
married a wife for my late husband and son so that I can keep their
names alive,” she enthused. “Their names cannot just die with them; they
will grow up and inherit what we laboured for. Any other person in my
shoe would have done that. I lost my husband and only son; more painful
was my son who died unmarried. But I’m fulfilled that my late son now
has two male children who are bearing his name. I looked at life and
asked whether it was really worth it. I hope for death every day. Any
time I wake up, I think about what the future holds since my husband and
only son are late. They have gone leaving me alone. Their death till
date is agonizing to me. But my consolation is that I have got a
replacement for them.”
Happily married to a dead manShe
announced that any moment from now she would commence the process of
changing all the documents regarding all her property to their names.
She also has a big dream for their young mother, Juliet. “She is
comfortable answering my son’s name,” she said. “She wrote JAMB and I’m
processing her admission to the Federal University, Lafia. Hopefully,
she will start a degree programme next year; she is humble, loyal and
focused.”
Mrs. Juliet Muese Antom agrees that she is comfortable
answering Mrs. Antom’s son’s name. “That is God’s design for my life,”
she said. “My parents were fully prepared to shame me that I got
pregnant while in the secondary school.
I was very young then
and could not tell exactly who among my boyfriends impregnated me. But I
strongly suspected one Mark, but he denied and ran away. I was
desperate without a place to go until Hajia came, so for me I’m very ok.
“I
have no problem, in fact I’m doing better than those who got married to
living husbands. Hajia is planning to buy a car for me next year if I
secure a university admission. It is unfortunate that I never met my
late husband. I only see his pictures but that is how God designed it.
As you can see, I’m looking sweet and people toast me a lot, but I shun
them. At the moment, I have a boyfriend who is a student at the state
university, Keffi. Though Hajia does not teleguide me but I make sure
she does not know when I have sex with my guy. She deserves that
respect.
“My first son’s biological father denied him. My second
son’s biological father who is a student at Keffi is married. He is
equally responsible for this very one l’m carrying, but he cannot come
and claim them. So, there is no problem. I’m good to go.”
Village head reactsSpeaking
in a chat with Saturday Sun , the village head in Doma LGA, Chief
Angbande Hue, said what happened is a known tradition among his people,
adding that the tradition was very rampant in the 60s. He explained that
since the woman went there with elderly men from her village to ask for
the girl’s hand in marriage, it is traditionally genuine. Those
children are accepted in that place and it has become their place of
origin.
He noted that most women who usually engaged in this kind
of practice had passed the age of childbearing and most have lost their
husbands and male children.
“We have a lot of such cases in
Benue, Nasarawa and Taraba states. Among the Tiv people, there is no
problem with what she did. Under our tradition, even the biological
father of those children cannot lay claim to them because they did not
pay the bride price; it is the person who paid the bride price that is
considered to be the legitimate owner.”
Lawyer agreesEmmanuel
Akur, a legal practitioner told Saturday Sun that such cases are
handled in the customary court and the court looks at the custom of the
tribe to take a decision. If the Tiv tradition says that the payment of
bride price is a criterion for ascertaining the rightful owner of the
child, so shall it be, he argued.
“I think there is no issue
here,” he said. “Nobody has come to lay claim to these children. The
woman, accompanied by elders of the village, paid the bride price of
this girl to secure her hand in marriage. That makes it legal. So the
origin of those children is not in doubt as far as customary law is
concerned.”
Source: The Sun
0 Comments