|
John Olubobokun
c.1864* to 1969
Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion)
Nigeria
John Olubobokun is one of many Africans
whose contributions to the expansion of Christianity have
not received adequate attention. It is true that Isaac Babamuboni
from Iyin Ekiti was noted for his major role in the evangelization
of Ekitiland, yet two great men from the same town, Osewa
[1] and Olubobokun [2], stand out among those who worked with
Babamuboni.
John was born during the 1870's to the Odofin's family of
Iyin Ekiti, in the present Ekiti state of Nigeria. No one
is certain of the exact year of his birth. However, as he
was a young man in his twenties at the arrival of Babamuboni
in Iyin Ekiti in 1894, his birth was tentatively fixed during
the 1870s.
Typical of those days, John did not receive a formal education.
According to a reliable source [3], it was Babamuboni who
taught him how to read and write. This exposure eventually
had a positive impact on his life.
Babamuboni's homecoming to Iyin Ekiti in 1893 [4] after he
gained freedom from slavery in Ibadan brought John Olubobokun
into contact with Christianity. However, his closeness with
Mr. J. A. Sowumi, an envoy of the Church Missionary Society
in 1895 [5], triggered commitment in Olubobokun. Sowumi was
sent from Ibadan to Ado Ekiti en route Iyin Ekiti. [6] As
Odofin Oshipe of Okelawe was accomodating, he gave Sowumi
the opportunity to preach to the people on repentance. It
is gathered that after delivering his sermon, Sowumi asked
about the route to Ado Ekiti. To make the journey easier for
him, Olubobokun, as a young servant (Omodeowa) [7] was mandated
to lead Sowumi to Ewi's palace in Ado Ekiti. There Sowumi
reminded the king that his presence in Ado was to fulfill
the promise made earlier by the CMS representatives--Rev.
Johnson and Rev. Philips--who visited Ado Ekiti in December
of 1894. [8]
Olubobokun was among the first converts to Christianity in
Iyin Ekiti in 1896 [9] and the first to be baptized in 1901.
[10] Interestingly, after his confirmation the following year
at Emmanuel Anglican Church, Ado Ekiti, he was commissioned
as the first lay reader [11] in the same church. He held this
position until 1929 when his uncle, Odofin Osipe died and
the people of Iyin Ekiti put pressure on him to fill the vacuum.
Travails as a young convert
Like the Christians of the early church, John Olubobokun faced
some challenges after declaring himself for Christ.
In 1900, barely four years after his conversion, John was
bitten by a poisonous snake one day around four in the afternoon.
As was the custom for the people of his generation, the native
doctors were contacted for medicine to neutralize the poison.
None was favorably disposed to help simply because John had
become a Christian. Their response was that "the God he serves
should take care of him." [12]
John was in pain for sixteen days before he received miraculous
healing without applying any herbal medicine. This divine
intervention built strong faith in John and in a few Christians
in Iyin at that time. Even the heathen began to see that the
God Babamuboni and Sowumi preached was superlatively powerful.
John Olubobokun also faced persecution initiated by an uncle.
Spurious allegations ranging from laziness and hatred for
idolatry (his father's religion) were made against him. While
the first allegation was generally based on the fact that
Christians who observed Sunday as a day of rest were lazy
people who dodged responsibility, the second allegation against
John was not taken lightly. To his people, his vehement abandonment
of idols was interpreted as an action against the family because
idols were recognized harbingers of good fortunes to the family.
[13] As a result, on June 27, 1900, at about four in the morning,
John, as an adult, [14] was tied up, hands and legs, and was
given a severe beating by members of his family--an action
meant to deride him and make him turn against Christianity.
When public disgrace did not discourage John, his uncle came
up with another story: John had to pay three pounds that his
late father owed. His response to the allegation was that
the inheritor of his father's property--fourteen wives, ten
children, and five slaves should not have brought up the issue
of an insignificant loan. Later, John realized that the allegation
was aimed at humiliating him for observing Sunday as a day
of rest when he was not dead because it was the belief of
non-Christians, at that time, that it is only the dead who
do not work. [15] John therefore decided to take any work
that would fetch him money in order to pay.
On August 17, 1901, John visited Catechist J. A. Sowumi in
Ado Ekiti and told him of his desire to go to Ijebu (Ogun
state) so he could get a job as a laborer in order to pay
off the loan. To his dismay, Sowumi promised to lend him the
three pounds with the agreement that John would serve him
[16] for three years. John accepted.
Any time Sowumi was not around, Olubobokun would attend to
people who came for prayer. Later, leading daily Morning Prayer
was added to his responsibilities. No wonder that after his
confirmation in 1902 by Bishop Philips John was given a license
the same day to start practicing as the first lay reader at
Emmanuel Anglican Church, Ado Ekiti.
Severe Persecution in Ado Ekiti
Reminiscent of the challenges faced by the early church in
Rome, Christians in Ado Ekiti experienced severe persecution
within the first decade of the arrival of Christianity in
the land. Olubobokun's case was more pathetic because as a
teacher of the Word of God, he became vulnerable to various
attacks from adherents of traditional religion.
In 1912, [17] adherents of traditional religion, against the
orders of the king, Ewi Aladesanmi I of Ado Ekiti, descended
on the Christians and began beating them publicly. On June
12, Esther Osunyemi was seriously beaten for refusing to give
money to a masquerade. True to his name, the masquerade known
as Abolohunku [18] stripped Esther naked. She ran to
the mission house to report the case to Rev. Harding.
Rev. Harding's appointment at Ilawe Ekiti prevented him from
handling the case. Therefore, he delegated Olubobokun to follow
the woman to the Ewi's palace. On their way, the masquerade
emerged from his hiding and attacked them. In order to implicate
Olubobokun, the onlookers started shouting that he was the
one beating the masquerade. This allegation was serious enough
to accuse anyone before the king and the elders, because masquerades
are believed to be custodians of the culture of the people--any
attack on them is tantamount to breaking the cultural norms
of the land and attracts severe punishment. The people released
their anger on Olubobokun, using various items to beat him
so that he fainted for a long period. He was then resuscitated
and detained at the Ewi's palace. The masquerade hit John
on the head with an object, creating an enduring pain that
he felt for the rest of his life. [19]
The news of this attack on the Christians spread to other
towns and villages. When Rev. Harding arrived in Ado, he went
straight to the palace to seek John's release. When the king
hesitated, Harding threatened him, saying that should Olubobokun
die, the colonial government would intervene in the matter.
[20] Consequently, even while the people were yelling at him,
the Ewi reluctantly released Olubobokun to Rev. Harding who
took him away for treatment. The pain Olubobokun felt from
the attack confined him to bed for eight days before he could
stand on his legs. It took him three months to regain enough
strength for any domestic chores, farming activities or church
programs.
Despite these various challenges, Olubobokun remained undaunted
but focused on his spiritual activities until July of 1929
when he took the throne as the Odofin of Iyin Ekiti. It must
be recorded that when the people of Iyin Ekiti were putting
pressure on him to take up the position, John Olubobokun repeatedly
told them that he would not participate in traditional practices
that jeopardized his Christian convictions. The people accepted
this condition before John ascended the throne.
Socio-Religious Legacy in Ekiti
In 1947, Olubobokun championed the relocation of Iyin Ekiti
from its former segmented settlements (in Odoro, Okesale,
Okotoro, and Okelawe) to its present site. [21] As he had
received a revelation that suggested that a demonic covenant
was plaguing the settlements that comprised Uyin, he
advocated for the change of name from Uyin to Iyin
in 1949. [22] Iyin means "the shout of joy day and
night."** To authenticate his divine mandate, Olubobokun was
the first to build a house and settle in the present Iyin
Ekiti.
His divine mandate was also felt at Ado and Igbara Ekiti where
he suggested the change of Ado to Ade (crown)
and Igbara to Igbala (salvation) Ekiti. Though
these communities declined his suggestion, about forty years
later, the Anglican authority in Ekiti created Igbala Otun
archdeaconry [23] which means "new salvation."
John Olubobokun bequeathed a legacy of Christian standards
not only to Iyin Ekiti but to Ekitiland in general. The fruit
of such legacy began to show up in the emergence of many Christian
Obas in Ekitiland who were determined not to comprise their
faith with ungodly traditional practices. The latest of these
was the present Oluyin of Iyin Ekiti, Oba (Justice) Ademola
Ajakaiye, a staunch Anglican who decided to have his investiture
ceremony done in the church (All Saints Anglican Church, Iyin
Ekiti) in 2005, [24] rather than in the shrine located in
the forest.
Conclusion
The attack on John Olubobokun might be connected with his
relationship with Babamuboni (the apostle of Christianity
in Ekitiland) who was from the same town. In 1896 Babamuboni
instructed the Ewi to stop wearing his cap in church [25]
as a mark of honor to the king of kings, an action the people
of Ado Ekiti considered disrespectful, coming from an ordinary
evangelist from Iyin Ekiti, a surburb in Ekitiland. It is
therefore not far-reaching to think that John Olubobokun's
activities would be viewed with suspicion.
John Olubobokun, a pillar of Christianity in Iyin Ekiti and
its environs, died on August 31, 1969.***
S. M. Mepaiyeda
Editor's Notes:
* c. 1964, not 1970s: Correction from an email message dated
September 22, 2011, sent to Project Manager from Rev. John Adeoye
Olubobokun, Ph.D. [johnolubobokun@gmail.com], the subject's
paternal grandson.
** Quoted from abovementioned email message: "I always thought
and still think that Iyin means praise." (John Olubobokun, grandson)
*** Correct date of death given in abovementioned email message.
Notes:
1. Rotimi Omotoye, "The Contribution of Bishop
Charles Philips to the Church, Political & Socio-Economic
Life in Eastern Yorubaland (1877-1906)," Ph.D Thesis (Department
of Religious Studies, U.I., 1999), p.124.
2. J. O. Odofin, Iwe Itan Kukuru fun Igbati Oro Olorun de
Ile Ekiti Ni 1895, published in 1959, p.7.
3. Interview with Evangelist Olubobokun, Diocesan evangelist
and lay reader, 74 years old, Iyin Ekiti, 2008.
4. J. O. Odofin, op. cit.
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid, p.11.
8. P. A. Adebiyi, History of Christianity in Ekitiland
(Lagos: CSS Ltd, 2003), p.47.
9. J. O. Odofin, op. cit., p.20.
10. Ibid.
11. In the Anglican church's setting, a lay reader or lay
preacher assists the pastor by visiting members, reading the
scriptural passages and occasionally by preaching the Word
of God.
12. Ibid, p.19
13. Interview with Evangelist Olubobokun, op.cit.
14. J. O. Olubokun, op.cit.
15. Ibid, p.20.
16. Such service in the vicarage (mission house) includes
domestic chores, farming for the missionary, and assisting
in tidying the church's surrounding.
17. J. O. Olubobokun, op.cit., p.15.
18. Ibid.
19. Ibid, pp.16-17.
20. Interview with chief Dorcas Omotoba, 88 years, Oketoro,
Iyin Ekiti, 2010.
21. Ibid.
22. J. O. Olubobokun op.cit.
23. An archdeaconry is an area comprising many churches under
a supervisor known as an archdeacon.. The area is carved out
for administrative convenience in a diocese.
24. Recorded in the log book of All Saints Anglican Church,
Iyin Ekiti by Ven. Bode Otenaike, vicar in 2005.
25. J. O. Olubobokun op.cit.
This article, received in 2011, was written
by Ven. Dr. S. M. Mepaiyeda, Department of Religious Studies,
University of Ibadan. Rev. Dr. Samson Adetunji Fatokun, Senior
Lecturer in Church History and Pentecostal Studies, Dept. of
Religious Studies, University of Ibadan, Nigeria, West Africa
and DACB liaison coordinator.
|
|