Barely
six months after the demise of the controversial Gbogan, Osun born
spiritualist and former spiritual father of Yoruba gospel singer, Tope Alabi,
late Prophet Ajanaku, members have dumped the once buoyant ministry.
ENCOMIUM Weekly checks revealed that the ministry which recorded over 2,000
members at times during the era of the late prophet now barely records over
150. And according to sources, this is not unconnected to the fact that many
miracle seekers became members due to the spiritual power of the prophet and
his prophetic messages which is now conspicuously missing.
A source squealed to Encomium that he left because he was comfortable with
the way and manner they
managed his death issue.
“I wasn’t too happy with the stuff going on there, especially with the way
they are going about his death issue. They quarrel with people who admitted
that he is dead. We are not fools and everybody knows he has been certified
dead, why the confusion? Also, some of his aides have turned the administration
of the ministry to politics which I’m not comfortable with.
Aside that, we learnt some left due to the many alleged controversies
surrounding his death and several speculations about his involvement with
occultism. They felt betrayed when the church authority didn’t have good
explanation about the whole issue.Why keep everybody in the dark about such
issues?
HOW MUCH THE
CHURCH HAS SPENT IN PRESERVING HIS CORPSE?
ENCOMIUM Weekly authoritatively gathered that the church has spent about
N500,000 preserving his corpse at the mortuary at 68 Military Hospital Road,
Yaba, Lagos.
One of the mortuary’s attendants, on Friday, February 28, 2014, revealed that N1,
500 is the fee for the form and about N100,000 is for deposit of corpse,
especially for VIPs. Then, preservation fee is N1,000 per day but for those who
want special treatment, they pay N1, 500 daily – a category late Prophet
Ajanaku falls into.
Thus, for six months the church has paid about N300,000 on preservation alone.
That excludes the other expenses they paid on tips for attendants, amongst
other things.
Despite the disagreement between the family members and the disciples of
late Prophet Ireti Ajanaku over his burial plans and date, ENCOMIUM Weekly
gathered that he would be buried at his church in Lagos.
AJANAKU’S LAST
HOURS:
The whole palaver began on Sunday, August 18, 2013, when it was reported
that the controversial clergy passed on, on Saturday, August 17, 2013, at
Gbongan, Osun state. Few hours later, it was announced that he had resurrected.
ENCOMIUM Weekly later gathered that his church members brought his corpse to
Lagos and started a vigil, praying for his resurrection.
However, on Thursday, August 22, 2013, he was certified dead by a team of
doctors. His corpse was deposited at the Military Hospital, Yaba, Lagos, on
Friday, August 25, 2013. While the family members knew their son was dead, the
church members still held on to the belief that he only went on a spiritual
exercise.
FEMI OYEWALE