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How my husband died — Playwright Ishola’s widow

 

Adebola Ishola, wife of the late renowned playwright, Akinwunmi Ishola has said her husband gave no sign that he was going to die anytime soon.
She told journalists in Ibadan on Saturday evening that Ishola took a spoonful of custard on Saturday at 9 a.m and repeatedly said: ‘Thank you my wife’, before he gave up the ghost moments after.
Ishola died at exactly 9.30am in his Akobo residence in Ibadan on Saturday.
She said Ishola had on Friday night taken ‘amala’ (food from yam powder) and bean soup dished for him.
“He finished everything. My husband did not give any sign that he would die.
“We give glory to God. The children said we should call the doctor anytime we feel that what he could do, he could not do it again. I have been keeping watch on him.
“Early this (Saturday) morning, we had a nurse who came and gave him his bath. I prepared custard for him. I put milo in it. As I was trying to feed him, he was just saying ‘Thank you my wife’ repeatedly.
“He has always been saying that anyway; even when his friends were around, he would ask them to thank me that I am the reason he was not dead yet,” she said.
The widow said she was worried when he took just a spoonful of custard because he used to eat very well, saying that prompted her to immediately call the doctor.
According to her: “I called the doctor. I also called the children, who are all living in Lagos, that their father was just praying and not taking his breakfast.
“He sat on the chair in his room upstairs. He did not say more than ‘Thank you my wife’. The nurse and I laid him on the bed. He immediately gave up the ghost.
“That was around 9:30 a.m. Even, the doctor I called and the children were yet to arrive when he gave up. Two of the children are around now. .”
Among the children of the deceased, Akinjide Ishola, a Lagos-based lawyer and Oluwatoyin Shomefun, arrived Ibadan on Saturday.
The early callers at the deceased residence include Toye Arulogun, Oyo State Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at the University of Ibadan, Ayo Bamgbose, and a businessman, Lekan Are.
The remains of the deceased was taken to the Anatomy Department, University of Ibadan.

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