African Herald Express

- written by Michael Mungai -

If you live in the U.S. and you are: -
•In bondage -
•Having bad dreams -
•Under a witchcraft attack or oppression -
•Possessed by mermaid spirits or other evil spirits -
•Barren and having frequent miscarriages -
•Experiencing an unsuccessful life of disappointment -
•Experiencing financial impotency with difficulties -
•Facing victimization and a lack of promotion -
•Experiencing a stagnant life with failures-

…You need not wait for too long. Helen Ukpabio, a Nigerian evangelist, will be traveling to the United States in March where she will be preaching in Texas. All ye people in the U.S. who have been struggling with the possession of mermaid spirits no longer have to be like fish out of water, someone’s finally coming to shore you up.

While it is laughable that there are credulous people in this world who believe in such fishy claims, the real issue that should trouble every American is that their impending guest is also a notorious child-witch hunter. Ukpabio alleges that Satan constantly manifests himself in the bodies of children through demonic possession, turning them into witches and wizards. Condemned as witches, these children are splashed with acid, buried alive, immersed in fire or expelled from their communities. According to Nigerian humanist campaigner Leo Igwe, Ukpabio “is a Christian fundamentalist and a Biblical literalist. She uses her sermons, teachings and prophetic declarations to incite hatred, intolerance and persecution of alleged witches and wizards.” Ukpabio, we learn from Igwe, claims to be an ex-witch, who later founded her own church to pursue her “anointed mission” of delivering people from witchcraft. Her ministry’s services include deliverance sessions that identify and cast out demons. Her church has extended witch- hunting branches all over Nigeria and even to other countries.

This won’t be Ukpabio’s first trip to the United States. In her last visit to Houston, Texas in 2010, she defended herself by arguing that her critics pick on her because she is an African. She cited J.K Rowling’s Harry Potter series, arguing that if Westerners do not take Rowling’s work seriously, then she (Ukpabio) is a hapless victim of Western racism. However, while Rowling’s readers tend to buy brooms, hats and “magic wands” for their children to play with, parents inspired by Ukpabio are more likely to buy machetes and physically confront the alleged demons living in their children’s bodies. Also, citing Western interference and racism has now become the mantra for many unscrupulous Africans pursuing self-serving ends. They unfairly take advantage of Africa’s injurious history with the West, a topic that elicits sentimental reactions from most Africans whenever it is invoked.

“If a child under the age of two screams in the night, cries and is always feverish with deteriorating health, he or she is a servant of Satan,” Ukpabio writes in her book, Unveiling the Mysteries of Witchcraft. In many rural African settings, these symptoms are common in almost all babies. In a country where more than 10 percent of children die before they reach five years, what these babies need is immediate medical attention. By instructing gullible Nigerian parents to persecute their own children, she continues to enrich herself, through her books and remittances from exorcisms. In this, she joins the growing list of televangelists who are fleecing poor Africans all over the continent, promising “miracles” for a fee.

I first learned of her nefarious campaign in the heartbreaking documentary, Dispatches: Return to Africa’s Witch Children. For the past nine years, I have worked with street children in Kenya, most of them coming from abusive backgrounds. I have watched over young boys who occasionally experience dreadful nightmares due to the trauma they endured under violent parents, guardians or relatives. This distress haunts the children for a long time and their suffering has caused substantial inhibition of their psychological and intellectual growth. It therefore disturbs me to see Ukpabio, hiding behind the immunity of religion, inflicting even worse torture on Nigerian children.

My appeal to rational Americans is to ensure that Ukpabio, with her hateful campaign against defenseless children, knows that she is not welcome in their country. She should be met with hostility similar to the protests against the Pope’s visit to the United Kingdom. While we should all respect the freedom of everyone to practice their religion, this respect should stop where it starts harming those around them. Like in the popular phrase attributed to Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., the right to swing my fist ends where the other man’s nose begins. In the name of religion, crimes against children continue with no justice or accountability from relevant authorities. However, protesting against Ukpabio’s visit to America would be a step towards the right direction in giving a voice to her unfortunate little victims.

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6 Comments

  • Eng. Philip Udegbunam says:

    “Condemned as witches, these children are splashed with acid, buried alive, immersed in fire or expelled from their communities”

    Dear Mr Mungai of Kenya, As a journalist (if you are), you should do your homework well before writing in this magnitude to condemn. You are not reporting, but calling on people to rise up against one another based on an unproven story.

    In fact I am reading about this Revr for the first time from you, but the nature of your story is very unprofessional and biased.

    Can you send an evidence that he poured acid, etc on children? I visit Kenya often to manage projects and aware that many Kenyas believe the most things the view about “Juju” and “Witches” in Naija movies. Please dont use this leverage to tarnish a possible innocent one.

    Bring on the facts, man!

  • Sylvester says:

    LEO IGWE RUNS TO HIDE IN GERMANY
    What a contrast!!! Leo Igwe does not believe in God, Jesus, Holy Spirit, Angels, Allah, Satan and witchcraft, yet in a recent lawsuit filed by Helen Ukpabio against him to produced proofs of all his allegations against her, Leo Igwe is now in the University of Beirut to study “Witchcraft Acquisition in Africa”.
    Leo Igwe must be insane. He must be deported to come and face his criminal charges. No hiding place.

  • Sylvester says:

    LEO IGWE RUNS TO HIDE IN GERMANY
    What a contrast!!! Leo Igwe does not believe in God, Jesus, Holy Spirit, Angels, Allah, Satan and witchcraft, yet in a recent lawsuit filed by Helen Ukpabio against him to produce proofs of all his allegations against her, Leo Igwe is now in the University of Beirut to study “Witchcraft Acquisition in Africa”.
    Leo Igwe must be insane. He must be deported to come and face his criminal charges. No hiding place.
    Leo Igwe,a lazy Nigerian is the originator of this protest.

  • Clinton says:

    ATHEIST SCHEMES TO BLACKMAIL HELEN UKPABIO
    The BHA an arm of the humanist and atheist group in Britain have circulated Helen Ukpabio’s name to their entire network all over the world. They held a meeting where they decided to use her and rubbish her messages by sticking to the fact that she kills and maims children. They made a sticker and falsified the Akwa Ibom State Government as their supporter.
    According to an insider, they have over 5,000 people in that connection and each of them is asked to send a letter of protest into the net and not direct posting to the Nigerian Police.
    Since the IHEU can only use activist reasons to penetrate any country, they have decided to use Helen Ukpabio as a local woman pastor whom they have investigated that she has no computer in her church, no internet, and may not even know that she is being blackmailed. The matter was concluded by asking their members to open blogs and send same messages to other existing network.

  • Timothy says:

    AWESOME!
    I have heard so much about Helen Ukpabio, a great woman of God that has transformed thousands of lives by the power of God. I have never heard that she preaches a “gospel of hate”. Does Michael Mungai have any example of such? I know that this woman of God preaches on many international TV stations, is there any of her messages on those four stations that can be tagged “gospel of hate”? If not then which?
    It is my opinion that both Christians and non – Christians attend her programme in America and hear her “gospel of hate” so called.

  • Philo says:

    AMERICA MUST PROTEST!
    The world is so hurting. If there ever was a time we needed God, it is in this most hurting hour. God sent His servant to touch and transform lives in America and one God hater rises to incite everyone against change and transformation. I urge Americans to rise up and protest against this atheist who tries to set himself up against God’s visitation in our land.

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