Don Jazzy's father shares epic old photos of himself with his children
Don Jazzy's father, Collins Enebeli took to his Facebook
page a few hours ago to share this old photo (right) of himself with his children, including Don Jazzy and D'Prince. Can you spot them in the photo? See the close up after the cut...
Hey God! Am in shock. Hmnnnnn! Don Jazzy?? White garment?? Hmnnnnn Speechless. Not like anything is wrong but it goes a long way to change my perception of things.
Wow wow wow WoooOw choi. Well don jazzy is the lad close to daddy and Dprince is the lad just in the front of jazzy very close to the little girl all in the left side. So don jazzy... this singing thing no start today hm cherubim and songs awww
Time is indeed right in the Hands of the Almighty.
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
U are a standard idiot... Y will u call someone better than u in all ramification a fool? And wat has his church got to do with marriage. Ode square, dont go and read ur books to pass ur exam stay here and be yabbing donjazzy that will elevate ur entire village. Aku ohia.
Young man, what you called "fcuked uniform" has contributed a lot in Nigerian music and helped in shaping today's modern churches . Most great artist, healers and pastors grew up from Cherubim & Seraphim, though, they left but, the spirit is with them. Please I'm advising you never put a corse on yourself by insulting things you don't know. Don't let Internet make you vulnerable to nuisance. You are too young to bear the consequences. Remain blessed!
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
you're nothing but a fool,a myopic fool for dt matter,instead of u to look for how they'll show ur own throwback pics here, u re beefing,mtcheeew.whether na white garment or black garment church u never reach him and u no go reach.
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
WTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
No wonder Don jazzy is a bad ass musician. He was born in the order. Cherubim pikin...no dey kpai. I was born there but marriage took me elsewhere. Chaii ...Mama J...
White garment devil church... What a shame. I guess that's why people were uncomfortable with the whole dorobucci sturvs. I'm sure it means something fetish in their white garment community smh
American Jewish student of world Jewish history Avraham Van Riper transmitted the following in a letter to Chika Oduah, an American-Nigerian journalist who was writing a story for the CNN about the Igbo people of Nigeria who believe that they are Jews, and whom an increasing number of non Igbos have began to believe that they are Jews.
In response Van Riper gave Oduah a brief history of the Jews, highlighting that indeed Jews went to, and many times settled in most parts of the world.
Van Riper noted: “Yes! Everybody knows about the major dislocation at the hands of the Assyrian Empire around 2600 years ago. Everybody knows that King Solomon was married to a rather famous East African ruler. And that at some point she and her son...the king's son...traveled back to East Africa. Everybody knows there were other occasional dislocations. And business travel. All thousands of years ago. Everybody knows that King Solomon dispatched a fleet of ships southward and eastward into the Indian Ocean, and that three years later the fleet, or part of it, returned to Israel...on the Mediterranean coast. Since there was no Suez Canal back then we know the fleet either circumnavigated Africa, the entire continent - or - they circumnavigated the planet! Either way, a big deal. Everybody knows that Jews and Phoenicians settled all across northern Africa. And when we read about 'Phoenicians’, 'we're often reading both about Jews and Phoenician people (as sailors, merchants, whatever). Everybody knows that Jews got kicked out of just about every country in Europe, leading to the big expulsion from Spain and then Portugal. And everyone knows that some of them sought refuge in West Africa. Perhaps in lots of places up and down West Africa”.
Van Riper also informed Oduah about his own observation:
“The 'problem' is determining and documenting who showed up where and when. The Beta Yisrael (Ethiopian Jews) could point to a few documents written by Jewish scholars hundreds of years ago. The Lemba people in Zimbabwe and RSA can provide DNA sequencing that shows they are descended from Jews (Edith Bruder, the University of London scholar that wrote the Black Jews of Africa is impressed enough with what she found in her study of the Igbo that she tried to mobilize resources for a study of the DNA of the Igbo)….Van Riper continued…..Although my Igbo brothers and sisters have a problem with actual documentation, actual paperwork - I've learned that they have a rather extensive mass of circumstantial data to present...if they were to pursue 'official' recognition as Jews. Chika, you're an anthro, not just a reporter. Check out just half of the 'data!' ……………….. Oh, I almost forgot language! There are lots of Asusu Igbo words that can, even now in 2013, be shown to be clearly related to ancient Hebrew……………….”
Van Riper can actually talk about the Igbos, because he has been studying the Igbos from many important angles for years. Alongside Professor Isaac Mozeson, the author of The Origin of Speeches-Intelligent Design In Language, Igbo-American Sampson Hannuka, and myself, Van Riper has been working to find Igbo words that are as he said, ‘clearly related to ancient Hebrew’. I can say that some important progress has been made in this project, but that more astonishing finds and revelations will come up when more Igbos that know Hebrew and similar languages like Aramaic, and Arabic join the effort. And while we are at it, it will be good to conduct a little demonstration about how close the Igbo and the Hebrew languages are to each other. Among the Igbos, when a man pre-deceases the father, by Igbo customs and traditions something that is note-worthy, and very important has happened. The position of the first son is very important in the Igbo family. Among other things the first son (di okpara) takes over from the father as the priest of the family, and gets a larger share of the inheritance. If the individual who died while the father was still alive was the first son, and had married and gotten a son or sons, his own son would not get the rights of the first son of the family, even though his father was the first son. The rights would go to the younger brother of the deceased (the uncle of the son of the deceased), because the deceased ‘nwuru na ihu nna ya’, (he died in the presence of the father). Curiously, what do we find in Genesis 11: 28?- “And Haran died in the presence of his father Terah…….” The writer of Genesis could have written that Haran died when/while the father was still alive. The writer could also have written that Haran died before….or pre-deceased the father. Both statements are standard constructions in English language. But he could not have, because he was translating from Hebrew to English, and had to try as much as possible to present what he saw. And what he saw in the Hebrew language is what is found in the Igbo language-that the way to present the death of a son when the father is still alive, is ‘that he died in the presence of the father.’ This somewhat confirms what G. T. Basden, the Welsh-Anglican missionary and anthropologist who lived among the Igbos for many years, observed so many years ago in his book Niger Ibos:1966-that “Igbo language runs an interesting parallel with Hebrew idiom.” More detailed studies of the similarities between the Igbo and the Hebrew languages can be conducted by reading the relevant sections of The Igbos And Israel: An Inter-cultural Study of the Largest Jewish Diaspora, and edenic/nigeria . com.
Many Jews actually moved into Africa in ancient times. In Jeremiah 43-5-7 we find the following: “Instead Johanan son of Kateah and all the army officers took the entire remnant of Judah-those who had returned from all the countries to which they had been scattered and had sojourned in the land of Judah, men, women, and children and the daughters of the king and all the people whom Nebuzaradan the chief of the guards had left with Gedaliah son of Ahikam, as well as the prophet Jeremiah and Baruch son of Neriah, and they went to Egypt”.
They went to Egypt, and we know that they would not have been locked up inside Egypt. Some could or must have continued to move downwards. Some did.
As I mentioned in the ‘Introductions’ section I decided to begin to investigate this position that some Israelites settled in what is known as Igboland in 2002. Since then I have discovered and confirmed a lot of things. I am writing books,and I’m beginning to make films and documentaries. Some of the books, video interviews, films and documentaries would be mentioned in this essay.
This essay is in a way a summary of what I have done foreleven years. A summary of what I have seen, heard, and experienced. NOTE:I may be found using the term ‘Igbo’ more in this work, but that is not because I think that it is a more correct term than the others listed above, but because it is the most commonly used term now.
Also in this work I will use the terms Jew, Israelite and Hebrew as if they mean the same thing-the Children of Israel. This is because in general terms they all mean the same thing now.
C. Meeting With Elders and Priests In the latter part of 2002 something that is very important began to happen at Nri.I will talk a little about Nri before I will start to narrate what happened.Nri is a very important place in the Igbo religion. When the majority of the Igbos were still practicing their culture which they call ‘omenaana’, priests from Nri were highly regarded. In 2002 I began to visitNri to ask old men and women questions about the Igbo people. I was very lucky because a year or so after my visits we lost some of the ‘moving libraries’ to death. Even though that was very sad, but we cannot say that that was not expected, because some were close to one hundred years when I visited. What made these men and women very important? They were very important because they had records of Igbo history that cannot be found in any university in the world. They knew the meanings of many things, and they knew why many things happen. Very importantly they were not very, if they were literate in Western educational terms at all.They had not read the Bible, because not only could they not read, but they also did not use the Bible in their religious services. This is too important, because some persons have claimed wrongly that the Igbos read about, and learned how to practice the Jewish customs which have been found to be Igbo customs as well, from the Bibles brought by the missionaries. Of course nothing could be more wrong. Many Igbo ‘Jewish customs’ and ‘practices’ are not in the Bible. We will get to this later. Observing the Igbos that still practice the Igbo religion would clear the air about so many things. They are for the most part illiterate, as far as reading is concerned. Most of the men and women that I interviewed at Nrifell into the category that I just talked about.They still practiced the Igbo religion. They were ‘ndi ogo Mmuo’, so they did not unduly suffer from ‘alienation from one’s own culture syndrome’, and ‘reverse inferiority complex’ which incidentally many people who got Western education, and left their own religion suffer from. Also even more importantly they were not fighting against ‘colonialism’, as many Igbos who got Western education have began to do. Accordingly they did not have to concoct and fabricate stories, deliberately misinterpret evidence-to make Igbo history grand, and the Igbo civilization the first and best in the world. They merely told their stories, got up and went home. According to the oldest one among those that I met at Nri, who was also the oldest person at Nri then: ‘I heard what I told you from my father, and he told me that he heard same from his father’.As I have mentioned above this men and women have a profound knowledge of the Igbo culture, because they (those still living) are practicing it. And as the Igbo culture is still the greatest reservoir that contains information about the Igbos, their testimonies are worth pure diamond. It is only recently that this culture began to receive standard and formal scholarly attention, so a serious scholar who wants to do, and present scholarly papers about the Igbos would onlybe doing the only right thing when he joins the practitioners of the religious aspects of the Igbo culture, and experiences what he’s studying. These men and women have a lot to offer on Igbo origins, history and other matters. In my opinion other relevant studies can just be useful to buttress what one can learn from them, and experience with them, as far as ethnological, anthropological, and historical studies about the Igbos are concerned.
Below are descriptions of some of the priests and elders, and some of the things that I heard from some of them:
Meeting at the house of Obudulu Nwokike of Obeagu sub-clan of Nri with Nze Onwa na etili ora, the oldest person in Nri Clan in Igboland on the 2nd day of October 2002, we had the following discussion:
Remy Ilona: “where did the Igbos came from?
Onwa responded without hesitation. “The Igbos are a people called Hebrews. They were led by a man with the name Nri. There was trouble (crises in their original home, so they took ship and sailed down the Omambala River (a tributary of the Niger). Nri was chief. On crossing the Omambala River into [what became Igbo land] he settled and established his government”.
Remy Ilona: “Chief Onwa where did those Hebrews come from?”
Nze Onwa: “They came from the place where sacrifices are made”. Remy Ilona: “Why?” Nze Onwa: “A place of sacrifice is there”. Remy Ilona: “Who are these Hebrews?”
I found the speculations below written by a Yoruba to be very revealing, even though I disagree with the sections that suggest that any group is superior to others. But we can take the wheat, and ……….., because there is much in the essay that is true about the Igbos: “Phoenicians forever [are] etched in my mind as they were the ones who through their incessant travel brought Egyptian civilization to Europe and spread it through the Greek City States and the Roman Empire[2] Located on the coastline of the Mediterranean, the Phoenicians had an enterprising maritime trading culture that was dominant between 1550 BC and 300BC.During this time, they used the galley, a man-powered sailing vessel to connect Africa with Europe[3] Through their maritime trade, the Phoenicians spread the use of the alphabet to North Africa and Europe, where it was adopted by the Greeks, who later passed it onto the Etruscans, who in turn transmitted it to the Romans. Basically, without the Phoenicians, Europe would never have developed the way it did. Every continent needs its own Phoenicians who will spread development[4] In Africa we have our own Phoenicians and they are called Ndigbo and it is time the African Union recognized this. I want to see an AU Directorate of Igbo Affairs set up as part of an ambitious plan to eradicate poverty from our continent. However, you look at it, Ndigbo are the best-off African ethnic group today. Anambra State (their most populous state) has the highest development index in Nigeria today and it also has the highest number of Nigerian millionaires. If you go to countries like Ghana, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Togo, Cameroun, etc, their retail trade is dominated by Igbo traders. It is time to tap into this enterpreunorship[5] It is no accident that Things Fall Apart has sold 8m copies and has been translated into 50 different languages. No other African ethnic group is capable of attracting that kind of interest from the rest of the world. Ask yourself why similar novels about the……………………………………………., etc have not been so successful
[6] There is an Igbo family in every street in Nigeria and there is no town on our continent where you will not find Igbo retailers. What this has led to is the spread of Nigerian ways all across Africa. Apart from the good like pepper soup, Nollywood films and our music, other African countries are also copying our bad ways like corruption, election rigging and wayo[7] It is up to the African Union to empower Ndigbo as special ambassadors to spread the message of prosperity across the continent. Only a dishonest person would deny the fact that Ndigbo are different from all other Africans. They are more of a cross breed between Germans and Jews in their ways with their industry and commerce[8] Just looking at the ways Ndigbo never built a single empire with an absolute monarch like say the Ashante, Yoruba, Zulu, Fulani, etc just tells you they are not originally African. They had developed in all other areas of human endeavor but not politically. I am tempted to believe that they were beamed into our continent from somewhere else[9] Wilbur Smith spoke about a thing called "The pace of Africa" in which we do things in a leisurely manner, without any awareness of the commercial implications of our actions. Ndigbo simply do not do that, which tends to lead me to believe that they are Semitic in origin. I suspect they came somewhere from the Middle East during the Ice Age[10] It is not surprising that Ndigbo have been victims of pogroms over the years. This is historical and always happens to groups of entrepreneurial retailers like the Jews, Phoenicians, and the Bamileke in Cameroon, the Kikuyu in Kenya, Chinese Indonesians, Serbs in the run-up to World War One, etc. That is the sad price Ndigbo have to pay for being the chosen ones. I once watched a World War Two film and the Jews were praying to God, saying that the cross [H]e has asked them to bear as the chosen race was too heavy to bear and they asked [H]him to relieve them of the burden. Take it or leave it Ndigbo but you will always be the subject of envy and jealousy across Africa, so it is time to face that reality. Even today, Jews are still envied across Europe and North America. It is to you that the task of developing the African continent falls. We shall not let you shirk your historical role.” By Ayo Akinfe, and presented by Zinny Eziada M, an Igbo activist to the facebook group ‘Radio Biafra London’.
We can say that Igbos say that the Igbos came from Israel. We can say that this is very popular. Precious Benson, a Nigerian of Liberian ancestry had while writing in Birds of Paradise, her travel book about Nigeria, observed,”……..Everyone knows that there were some migrations that led people to Nigeria. The Yoruba, for example, popularly but vaguely claim to have descended into this area after a migration from Saudi Arabia. The Hausa-Fulani, the largest ethnic group, know that their ancestors roved down from further north, to conquer and merge with the Hausa who had lived in Nigeria before their coming; some Igbos whole-heartedly support the idea that they are descended from Israel-there has even been talk that of one of the lost tribes of Judaism descended into this area, just as they claim to have done in Ethiopia”1. From the list which I presented above the reader would see that many Igbo writers have also written and published books about the Igbos descent from the Jews. And that some Jewish and non Igbo and non Jewish writers have also written about the connection. But until recent times, at least to my own knowledge this knowledge has not been transformed into concrete things like making films on the subject, formal incorporation of Igbo-Jewish Studies into the Igbo educational curricula, teaching the same in institutions of learning in Igboland, and in institutions which Igbos attend everywhere, and deepening of cultural and other ties between the Igbo people and the world-wide Jewish community. Why hasn’t these happened, one may ask. We will skirt the borders of why the above is only beginning to happen now in this essay. We can say that more research needed to be done. And that it is now that the Igbo people are ready to begin to do what was listed
Read the whole thesis. Kindly do make your further research available to us when the conclusions are out. Would be honoured if I you could have one sent to isioku@gmail.com
Linda you are a wicked woman honestly, na dis type of photos of don jazzy you suppose post? You didn't see graduation pics or smthn. Na dis type guru Maratji photos you cum post. I can see why don jazzy is famous, juju thingzzzz. The father don burn different candles and lofinda together.
Hahahaha.... I can just picture Don jazzy trying to choke himself with his pillow while he screams 'cmon dad,that wasn't necessary' and D'prince will be like 'Well I'm still the prince of efizzy', and the dad will be like 'yeah,I can take you down when I want' Hahahahahahaha.... Cute though,very cute foundation.....
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Quality Office Shirts and casual wears at affordable prices (Male and Female). Delivery at your doorstep Nation wide.
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Other items available: Raulph Lauren Polos, Denim savage shirts, Jeans trousers,Chinoze, Pant Trousers, Round/ V neck, Jeans trousers Tie- Complete set Curtis-Hawes and T.M Lewin Italian Shoes etc.
Hustle and bustle of 9 month oau predegree,this weird baby might b dat of a celebrity with celebrity latest that would thrill u all on mrpaynesamuel.blogspot.com
Hustle and bustle of 9 month oau predegree,this weird baby might b dat of a celebrity with celebrity latest that would thrill u all on mrpaynesamuel.blogspot.com
Now I love Den more. Army of salvation Jazzy n Angels without wings d'prince. There is absolutely nfn wrong with their church. That its a white garment church doesn't mean its evil. The eternal sacred order of cherubim and seraphim as far as am concern is a spiritual n true God worshippers denomination. Jazzy u shd b a super apostle by now. #thumbs up 2 their dad. It means dey shd Neva forget aw dey started n der background. Cherubim pikin...... .......
The eternal sacred order of the cherubim and seraphim world wide. Founded by Saint Moses Orimolade . Linda tell your reader to stop sounding like people possesses with demons. This church has been in early 90s before all the new churches. Most of the founder of the new churches (Redeemed, deeper life) were members before they were called to open theirs . Is like your people only read your blog and are not exposed to anything useful. Stop condemning people's churches. Who told you that Becuae you attend non white garment church will make you get go haven. God knows those to is serving him. Don't be deceived . Cherubim pikin is alwaya proud to say it and Don Jazzy is a proud cherubim. He has never hiďden it Becuae he knew the truth. Hater of cherubim should worry about ur own self. Salvation is individual
Hahahahahahaha laugh wan kill me Don J I no fit look u desame way again, so na Cele u waka come from??? Cheiiiii dis ur papa sef why him fall ur hand like this
All of you guys that are making vain comments abt collins enebeli and his sons based on d throw bk pics...hope u would do d same when u see bishop david oyedepo or pa enoch adeboye, kumuyi or davidabioye in d same uniform some years ago.....d things of d spiirit are spiritually discerned...judge not lest you be not judged... Go do ur research
White garment tinz...
ReplyDeleteDey didn't change much!
DeleteOlorun Kerubu...Ooseun!
DeleteI was born and still worship in Cherubim and Seraphim Church.
Ayo Ni O!
Yea! I can spot Don jazzy.
DeleteDon baba jay
DeleteHe looks just like his father..lol
ReplyDeleteNo way stern. He has his father's body type and long face but looks so much like his mum. Got that wonderful nose from mum! Lol
DeleteLmao
ReplyDeleteHhHhhhaaaahhaaaaa
ReplyDeleteU deleted this post before
ReplyDeleteKikikikiki....
ReplyDeleteRabbi don baba J. Woli jazzy
ReplyDeleteHey God! Am in shock. Hmnnnnn! Don Jazzy?? White garment?? Hmnnnnn
ReplyDeleteSpeechless. Not like anything is wrong but it goes a long way to change my perception of things.
Loool... I guys this is where AY got is concept from
ReplyDeleteNow it makes more sense abt his melody.
ReplyDeleteWait o..d prince is don J brother?? Im stale o
ReplyDeleteNo way!
DeleteOh oh! Na White garment things o! Linda take note!
ReplyDeleteOh oh! Na White garment things o! Linda take note!
ReplyDeleteOh oh! Na White garment things o! Linda take note!
ReplyDeleteLol
ReplyDeleteNdi uka akuruma aka? Wat? Nawaaoo
ReplyDeleteLol @ "ndi uka akuruma aka". It's been a long time I heard that!
DeleteWow wow wow WoooOw choi. Well don jazzy is the lad close to daddy and Dprince is the lad just in the front of jazzy very close to the little girl all in the left side. So don jazzy... this singing thing no start today hm cherubim and songs awww
ReplyDeleteTime is indeed right in the Hands of the Almighty.
That vuvuzela P guy
Lo.....Don baba and D'prince didn't change much though. Nice one.
ReplyDelete#TeamBlessed#
so don jazzy na cele man streetrequest.com
ReplyDeleteSuru to the lere...Ogini! ndi uka white/sabath ndi ogologo uwe...
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteHenry Eze!!! Yah mouth no go harm you! Enh, make u go put padlock for am! Na which kain outburst be dat? Kulu temper!
DeleteU are a standard idiot... Y will u call someone better than u in all ramification a fool? And wat has his church got to do with marriage. Ode square, dont go and read ur books to pass ur exam stay here and be yabbing donjazzy that will elevate ur entire village. Aku ohia.
DeleteDude! Seriously? Old fool? Guy take a chill pill, beefing the man is making him bigger# winks
DeleteYoung man, what you called "fcuked uniform" has contributed a lot in Nigerian music and helped in shaping today's modern churches . Most great artist, healers and pastors grew up from Cherubim & Seraphim, though, they left but, the spirit is with them. Please I'm advising you never put a corse on yourself by insulting things you don't know. Don't let Internet make you vulnerable to nuisance. You are too young to bear the consequences. Remain blessed!
DeleteFuckin looser
DeleteWaste of skin
DeleteHave some respect you silly thing! Yes, you that calls urself Henry Eze
DeleteWow you must be very stupid for your comment here. He's blessed you should get a life
DeleteU re just an ediot ......small f oooooooooooooo.
DeleteSee a Doctor.
DeleteAre you alright? You must be out of your mind.
DeleteIdiot...u we no dey wear uniform calling someone fool.what do have to show for ur life. Ur head like okin biscut
DeleteHenry eze ur just a fool. And anyone who is jealous of his fellow man never gets his own. So u will remain poor for life
DeleteU just insulted ur entire generation.
DeleteDonJay Neva change at all. Lolz
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteHow stupid can u be...
Deleteyou're nothing but a fool,a myopic fool for dt matter,instead of u to look for how they'll show ur own throwback pics here, u re beefing,mtcheeew.whether na white garment or black garment church u never reach him and u no go reach.
DeleteOloshi, u're as stupid as d trash that comes out of ur filthy mouth... dee
DeleteBia this earthworm If you know how ugly n unhealthy u look eeh! U no go De open mouth anyhow. Have u eaten today? Last night nko? Onye aguu
DeleteNow I believe his age
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteAt least now we know the type you attend will teach you swear words and leave you hungry. Before I go,why not do the needful with your kitchen knife.
DeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteYou amaze me with ur comment....what does his church got to do with his relationship status?...... n mind u, sin against God is unforgivable
DeleteWTF, so na this kind church this old fool they go, no wonder he is not yet married, am sure he is ashamed of his church, that's why he never share a pixs of him in that fcuked uniform
ReplyDeleteYou are so poor n dumb!
DeleteAre you possessed?
DeleteFoolish fool! Why are you do biterr? Is he responsible for your failed life ni?
DeleteAnd WTF is wrong with going to a white gatment church mr man? Hypocrisy at d highest level. Ode.
DeleteLol... I spot donjaZ beside his father and dprince in front of him... Is dis the white garment church abi cele?
ReplyDeleteMeenah_wakil on instagram
Lol... I spot donjaZ beside his father and dprince in front of him... Is dis the white garment church abi cele?
ReplyDeleteMeenah_wakil on instagram
Shey they be Cele, Cherubun or Olumba Olumba? Funny photos, SURULERE part one.
ReplyDeleteNo wonder Don jazzy is a bad ass musician. He was born in the order. Cherubim pikin...no dey kpai. I was born there but marriage took me elsewhere. Chaii
ReplyDelete...Mama J...
Talk true, wch one are u enjoy it most, ur new religion or that God forsaken religion
DeleteTell them joo
DeleteTalk true, wch one are u enjoy it most, ur new religion or that God forsaken religion
DeleteTalk true, wch one are u enjoy it most, ur new religion or that God forsaken religion
DeleteTrue there we no dey pai!
DeleteHahaha the two boys on the far left. Don jazzy resembles spiritual master
ReplyDeletelmaoooooooooooooo...Rabbi....my chest oooo
ReplyDeleteSo don baba nah olumba olumba
ReplyDeleteLol, yh of course!! D boss right......
ReplyDeleteHehehehe don jazzy looks very funny oo.choi!
ReplyDeleteNice to have old photos. Was this at one of Oschoffa's meetings though? Cherubim and Seraphim
ReplyDeleteRetard, CCC and C & S are the same to you abi? Ode
DeleteFunny
ReplyDeleteNawa
ReplyDeleteNawa
ReplyDeleteDon Jazzy omo ogun
ReplyDeleteHeheheheheheheheh dis man fall don jazzy hand big time, so na aladura church dis dude dey go, anyways hallelujah ooooo.
ReplyDeleteDon J and prince won't like this picture at all,big shame
DeleteRABBI HAHAHA!
ReplyDeleteWoow
ReplyDeleteHihihi
ReplyDeleteMIMO MIMO MIMO NI OLUWA
ReplyDeleteNa real epic, but why the man com punish Don Jazzy and D' prince. No good oooo. Lol
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteLovely.
◇◇◇◇◇◇ If ignorance is bliss, wipe the smile off my face ◇ ◇ ◇ ◇ ◇ ◇
Cherubim? Wow
ReplyDeleteCan't help bt imagine how don jazzy wil scatter ground with dance...lol
ReplyDeleteAre they Jewish? I mean is Don Jazzy Jewish?
ReplyDeleteLol.chia cele baba
ReplyDeleteLol...Don Jazzy looking really funny there..
ReplyDeleteThe second to d last pic are don jazzy & d prince
ReplyDeleteThe second to d last pic are don jazzy & d prince
ReplyDeleteHmm white garment church.
ReplyDelete~D great anonymous!
Nna these ears have always been there o
ReplyDeleteDon baba j on d yellow cap lol #kerebu_kerebu
ReplyDeleteAunty linda biko
Are they olumba olumba?? #curious#
ReplyDeleteChoi! Bia make una nor vex o,are they siblings?
ReplyDeleteLmao! Very funny dad...... Guess he is trying to remind them of their root
ReplyDeleteHandsome mahn chai!!! Wetin be dis one cherabin and Sara phine
ReplyDeleteDon jazz emilado
ReplyDeleteOh boy na white garment tinz
ReplyDeleteAre don jazzy, d prince and Dr sid related. I'm asking cos of the enebeli name.
ReplyDeleteLmao
ReplyDeleteWhat kind of prayer house is this..cherubim and seraphim
ReplyDeleteHope they still attend cherubim?
ReplyDeleteWhite garment devil church... What a shame. I guess that's why people were uncomfortable with the whole dorobucci sturvs. I'm sure it means something fetish in their white garment community smh
ReplyDeleteHater oshi! Nonentity! Who knows your low life?,
DeleteHian!!! Aye month juba... dee
Deleteepic...dat face is still dsame
ReplyDeleteCan't laugh tho....see him face
ReplyDeleteIt's not a small sumfin. :-)
ReplyDeleteIt's not a small sumfin. :-)
ReplyDeleteThey look like their dad
ReplyDeleteDon jazzy plz recreate dis childhood fotos
ReplyDeleteIGBO JEWS LOL
ReplyDeletePROUD OF IGBO JEWS, BUT THIS RABBI IS FUNNY THOUGH
ReplyDeleteAmerican Jewish student of world Jewish history Avraham Van Riper transmitted the following in a letter to Chika Oduah, an American-Nigerian journalist who was writing a story for the CNN about the Igbo people of Nigeria who believe that they are Jews, and whom an increasing number of non Igbos have began to believe that they are Jews.
ReplyDeleteIn response Van Riper gave Oduah a brief history of the Jews, highlighting that indeed Jews went to, and many times settled in most parts of the world.
Van Riper noted: “Yes! Everybody knows about the major dislocation at the hands of the Assyrian Empire around 2600 years ago. Everybody knows that King Solomon was married to a rather famous East African ruler. And that at some point she and her son...the king's son...traveled back to East Africa. Everybody knows there were other occasional dislocations. And business travel. All thousands of years ago. Everybody knows that King Solomon dispatched a fleet of ships southward and eastward into the Indian Ocean, and that three years later the fleet, or part of it, returned to Israel...on the Mediterranean coast. Since there was no Suez Canal back then we know the fleet either circumnavigated Africa, the entire continent - or - they circumnavigated the planet! Either way, a big deal. Everybody knows that Jews and Phoenicians settled all across northern Africa. And when we read about 'Phoenicians’, 'we're often reading both about Jews and Phoenician people (as sailors, merchants, whatever). Everybody knows that Jews got kicked out of just about every country in Europe, leading to the big expulsion from Spain and then Portugal. And everyone knows that some of them sought refuge in West Africa. Perhaps in lots of places up and down West Africa”.
When Daddy wanna show he is still in charge. Nice throwback pix. Lol
ReplyDeleteVan Riper also informed Oduah about his own observation:
ReplyDelete“The 'problem' is determining and documenting who showed up where and when. The Beta Yisrael (Ethiopian Jews) could point to a few documents written by Jewish scholars hundreds of years ago. The Lemba people in Zimbabwe and RSA can provide DNA sequencing that shows they are descended from Jews (Edith Bruder, the University of London scholar that wrote the Black Jews of Africa is impressed enough with what she found in her study of the Igbo that she tried to mobilize resources for a study of the DNA of the Igbo)….Van Riper continued…..Although my Igbo brothers and sisters have a problem with actual documentation, actual paperwork - I've learned that they have a rather extensive mass of circumstantial data to present...if they were to pursue 'official' recognition as Jews. Chika, you're an anthro, not just a reporter. Check out just half of the 'data!' ……………….. Oh, I almost forgot language! There are lots of Asusu Igbo words that can, even now in 2013, be shown to be clearly related to ancient Hebrew……………….”
Van Riper can actually talk about the Igbos, because he has been studying the Igbos from many important angles for years. Alongside Professor Isaac Mozeson, the author of The Origin of Speeches-Intelligent Design In Language, Igbo-American Sampson Hannuka, and myself, Van Riper has been working to find Igbo words that are as he said, ‘clearly related to ancient Hebrew’. I can say that some important progress has been made in this project, but that more astonishing finds and revelations will come up when more Igbos that know Hebrew and similar languages like Aramaic, and Arabic join the effort. And while we are at it, it will be good to conduct a little demonstration about how close the Igbo and the Hebrew languages are to each other. Among the Igbos, when a man pre-deceases the father, by Igbo customs and traditions something that is note-worthy, and very important has happened. The position of the first son is very important in the Igbo family. Among other things the first son (di okpara) takes over from the father as the priest of the family, and gets a larger share of the inheritance. If the individual who died while the father was still alive was the first son, and had married and gotten a son or sons, his own son would not get the rights of the first son of the family, even though his father was the first son. The rights would go to the younger brother of the deceased (the uncle of the son of the deceased), because the deceased ‘nwuru na ihu nna ya’, (he died in the presence of the father). Curiously, what do we find in Genesis 11: 28?- “And Haran died in the presence of his father Terah…….” The writer of Genesis could have written that Haran died when/while the father was still alive. The writer could also have written that Haran died before….or pre-deceased the father. Both statements are standard constructions in English language. But he could not have, because he was translating from Hebrew to English, and had to try as much as possible to present what he saw. And what he saw in the Hebrew language is what is found in the Igbo language-that the way to present the death of a son when the father is still alive, is ‘that he died in the presence of the father.’ This somewhat confirms what G. T. Basden, the Welsh-Anglican missionary and anthropologist who lived among the Igbos for many years, observed so many years ago in his book Niger Ibos:1966-that “Igbo language runs an interesting parallel with Hebrew idiom.” More detailed studies of the similarities between the Igbo and the Hebrew languages can be conducted by reading the relevant sections of The Igbos And Israel: An Inter-cultural Study of the Largest Jewish Diaspora, and edenic/nigeria . com.
Many Jews actually moved into Africa in ancient times. In Jeremiah 43-5-7 we find the following: “Instead Johanan son of Kateah and all the army officers took the entire remnant of Judah-those who had returned from all the countries to which they had been scattered and had sojourned in the land of Judah, men, women, and children and the daughters of the king and all the people whom Nebuzaradan the chief of the guards had left with Gedaliah son of Ahikam, as well as the prophet Jeremiah and Baruch son of Neriah, and they went to Egypt”.
ReplyDeleteThey went to Egypt, and we know that they would not have been locked up inside Egypt. Some could or must have continued to move downwards. Some did.
As I mentioned in the ‘Introductions’ section I decided to begin to investigate this position that some Israelites settled in what is known as Igboland in 2002. Since then I have discovered and confirmed a lot of things. I am writing books,and I’m beginning to make films and documentaries. Some of the books, video interviews, films and documentaries would be mentioned in this essay.
This essay is in a way a summary of what I have done foreleven years. A summary of what I have seen, heard, and experienced.
NOTE:I may be found using the term ‘Igbo’ more in this work, but that is not because I think that it is a more correct term than the others listed above, but because it is the most commonly used term now.
Also in this work I will use the terms Jew, Israelite and Hebrew as if they mean the same thing-the Children of Israel. This is because in general terms they all mean the same thing now.
ReplyDeleteC. Meeting With Elders and Priests
In the latter part of 2002 something that is very important began to happen at Nri.I will talk a little about Nri before I will start to narrate what happened.Nri is a very important place in the Igbo religion. When the majority of the Igbos were still practicing their culture which they call ‘omenaana’, priests from Nri were highly regarded. In 2002 I began to visitNri to ask old men and women questions about the Igbo people. I was very lucky because a year or so after my visits we lost some of the ‘moving libraries’ to death. Even though that was very sad, but we cannot say that that was not expected, because some were close to one hundred years when I visited. What made these men and women very important? They were very important because they had records of Igbo history that cannot be found in any university in the world. They knew the meanings of many things, and they knew why many things happen. Very importantly they were not very, if they were literate in Western educational terms at all.They had not read the Bible, because not only could they not read, but they also did not use the Bible in their religious services. This is too important, because some persons have claimed wrongly that the Igbos read about, and learned how to practice the Jewish customs which have been found to be Igbo customs as well, from the Bibles brought by the missionaries. Of course nothing could be more wrong. Many Igbo ‘Jewish customs’ and ‘practices’ are not in the Bible. We will get to this later. Observing the Igbos that still practice the Igbo religion would clear the air about so many things. They are for the most part illiterate, as far as reading is concerned. Most of the men and women that I interviewed at Nrifell into the category that I just talked about.They still practiced the Igbo religion. They were ‘ndi ogo Mmuo’, so they did not unduly suffer from ‘alienation from one’s own culture syndrome’, and ‘reverse inferiority complex’ which incidentally many people who got Western education, and left their own religion suffer from. Also even more importantly they were not fighting against ‘colonialism’, as many Igbos who got Western education have began to do. Accordingly they did not have to concoct and fabricate stories, deliberately misinterpret evidence-to make Igbo history grand, and the Igbo civilization the first and best in the world. They merely told their stories, got up and went home. According to the oldest one among those that I met at Nri, who was also the oldest person at Nri then: ‘I heard what I told you from my father, and he told me that he heard same from his father’.As I have mentioned above this men and women have a profound knowledge of the Igbo culture, because they (those still living) are practicing it. And as the Igbo culture is still the greatest reservoir that contains information about the Igbos, their testimonies are worth pure diamond. It is only recently that this culture began to receive standard and formal scholarly attention, so a serious scholar who wants to do, and present scholarly papers about the Igbos would onlybe doing the only right thing when he joins the practitioners of the religious aspects of the Igbo culture, and experiences what he’s studying. These men and women have a lot to offer on Igbo origins, history and other matters. In my opinion other relevant studies can just be useful to buttress what one can learn from them, and experience with them, as far as ethnological, anthropological, and historical studies about the Igbos are concerned.
Below are descriptions of some of the priests and elders, and some of the things that I heard from some of them:
ReplyDeleteMeeting at the house of Obudulu Nwokike of Obeagu sub-clan of Nri with Nze Onwa na etili ora, the oldest person in Nri Clan in Igboland on the 2nd day of October 2002, we had the following discussion:
Remy Ilona: “where did the Igbos came from?
Onwa responded without hesitation. “The Igbos are a people called Hebrews. They were led by a man with the name Nri. There was trouble (crises in their original home, so they took ship and sailed down the Omambala River (a tributary of the Niger). Nri was chief. On crossing the Omambala River into [what became Igbo land] he settled and established his government”.
Remy Ilona: “Chief Onwa where did those Hebrews come from?”
Nze Onwa: “They came from the place where sacrifices are made”.
Remy Ilona: “Why?”
Nze Onwa: “A place of sacrifice is there”.
Remy Ilona: “Who are these Hebrews?”
I found the speculations below written by a Yoruba to be very revealing, even though I disagree with the sections that suggest that any group is superior to others. But we can take the wheat, and ……….., because there is much in the essay that is true about the Igbos:
ReplyDelete“Phoenicians forever [are] etched in my mind as they were the ones who through their incessant travel brought Egyptian civilization to Europe and spread it through the Greek City States and the Roman Empire[2] Located on the coastline of the Mediterranean, the Phoenicians had an enterprising maritime trading culture that was dominant between 1550 BC and 300BC.During this time, they used the galley, a man-powered sailing vessel to connect Africa with Europe[3] Through their maritime trade, the Phoenicians spread the use of the alphabet to North Africa and Europe, where it was adopted by the Greeks, who later passed it onto the Etruscans, who in turn transmitted it to the Romans. Basically, without the Phoenicians, Europe would never have developed the way it did. Every continent needs its own Phoenicians who will spread development[4] In Africa we have our own Phoenicians and they are called Ndigbo and it is time the African Union recognized this. I want to see an AU Directorate of Igbo Affairs set up as part of an ambitious plan to eradicate poverty from our continent. However, you look at it, Ndigbo are the best-off African ethnic group today. Anambra State (their most populous state) has the highest development index in Nigeria today and it also has the highest number of Nigerian millionaires. If you go to countries like Ghana, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Togo, Cameroun, etc, their retail trade is dominated by Igbo traders. It is time to tap into this enterpreunorship[5] It is no accident that Things Fall Apart has sold 8m copies and has been translated into 50 different languages. No other African
ethnic group is capable of attracting that kind of interest from the rest of the world. Ask yourself why similar novels about the……………………………………………., etc have not been so successful
[6] There is an Igbo family in every street in Nigeria and there is no town on our
ReplyDeletecontinent where you will not find Igbo retailers. What this has led to is the spread of Nigerian ways all across Africa. Apart from the good like pepper soup, Nollywood films and our music, other African countries are also copying our bad ways like corruption, election rigging and wayo[7] It is up to the African Union to empower Ndigbo as special ambassadors to spread the message of prosperity across the continent. Only a dishonest person would deny the fact that Ndigbo are different from all other Africans. They are more of a cross breed between Germans and Jews in their ways with their industry and commerce[8] Just looking at the ways Ndigbo never built a single empire with an absolute monarch like say the Ashante, Yoruba, Zulu, Fulani, etc just tells you they are not originally African. They had developed in all other areas of human endeavor but not politically. I am tempted to believe that they were beamed into our continent from somewhere else[9] Wilbur Smith spoke about a thing called "The pace of Africa" in which we do things in a leisurely manner, without any awareness of the commercial implications of our actions. Ndigbo simply do not do that, which tends to lead me to believe that they are Semitic in origin. I suspect they came somewhere from the Middle East during the Ice Age[10] It is not surprising that Ndigbo have been victims of pogroms over the years. This is historical and always happens to groups of entrepreneurial retailers like the Jews, Phoenicians, and the Bamileke in Cameroon, the Kikuyu in Kenya, Chinese Indonesians, Serbs in the run-up to World War One, etc. That is the sad price Ndigbo have to pay for being the chosen ones. I once watched a World War Two film and the Jews were praying to God, saying that the cross [H]e has asked them to bear
as the chosen race was too heavy to bear and they asked [H]him to relieve them of the burden. Take it or leave it Ndigbo but you will always be the subject of envy and jealousy across Africa, so it is time to face that reality. Even today, Jews are still envied across Europe and North America. It is to you that the task of developing the African continent falls. We shall not let you shirk your historical role.”
By Ayo Akinfe, and presented by Zinny Eziada M, an Igbo activist to the facebook group ‘Radio Biafra London’.
I Rep Cherubim for life
ReplyDeleteWe can say that Igbos say that the Igbos came from Israel. We can say that this is very popular.
ReplyDeletePrecious Benson, a Nigerian of Liberian ancestry had while writing in Birds of Paradise, her travel book about Nigeria, observed,”……..Everyone knows that there were some migrations that led people to Nigeria. The Yoruba, for example, popularly but vaguely claim to have descended into this area after a migration from Saudi Arabia. The Hausa-Fulani, the largest ethnic group, know that their ancestors roved down from further north, to conquer and merge with the Hausa who had lived in Nigeria before their coming; some Igbos whole-heartedly support the idea that they are descended from Israel-there has even been talk that of one of the lost tribes of Judaism descended into this area, just as they claim to have done in Ethiopia”1.
From the list which I presented above the reader would see that many Igbo writers have also written and published books about the Igbos descent from the Jews. And that some Jewish and non Igbo and non Jewish writers have also written about the connection. But until recent times, at least to my own knowledge this knowledge has not been transformed into concrete things like making films on the subject, formal incorporation of Igbo-Jewish Studies into the Igbo educational curricula, teaching the same in institutions of learning in Igboland, and in institutions which Igbos attend everywhere, and deepening of cultural and other ties between the Igbo people and the world-wide Jewish community. Why hasn’t these happened, one may ask. We will skirt the borders of why the above is only beginning to happen now in this essay. We can say that more research needed to be done. And that it is now that the Igbo people are ready to begin to do what was listed
Anonymous 10:43 pm, thank you for this write up. Bravo, I'm watching THE TRUTH ABOUT ANCIENT AFRICA (AMAZING BLACK HISTORY DOCUMENTARY)
DeleteAnonymous 10:43 pm, God bless you
DeleteRead the whole thesis. Kindly do make your further research available to us when the conclusions are out. Would be honoured if I you could have one sent to isioku@gmail.com
DeleteRosie Asked.......Are they members of C and S church?
ReplyDeleteLinda you are a wicked woman honestly, na dis type of photos of don jazzy you suppose post? You didn't see graduation pics or smthn. Na dis type guru Maratji photos you cum post. I can see why don jazzy is famous, juju thingzzzz. The father don burn different candles and lofinda together.
ReplyDeleteEwoo..olubolubo...lol
ReplyDeleteNo comment just laughs
ReplyDeleteFine fine children. Jazzy Papa na fine man sha. Everybody with their destiny. Today they are big boys. God bless your family.
ReplyDeleteLol... I fear white garment church o!🙈
ReplyDeleteSo don jazzy na oshoffa....lol
ReplyDeleteOmg wat da fck is dis...cele I fear dem but I no run
ReplyDeleteChai #ineverhexpererit
ReplyDeleteNice....
ReplyDeleteWetin be this? Don jazzy be Celebobo? Abi na Eckankar?
ReplyDeleteHehehehe.i luff d man biko
ReplyDeleteCele thingz
ReplyDeleteFunny weird pics
ReplyDeleteFunny weird pics
ReplyDeleteI never knew collins enebeli was donjazzy's father...
ReplyDeletelol, funny picx... See D prince's looks like one house boy... Mehn! nobody knows tomorrow
ReplyDeleteI never knew collins enebeli was donjazzy's father...
ReplyDeleteI never knew collins enebeli was donjazzy's father...
ReplyDeleteHahahaha
ReplyDeleteLord
ReplyDeleteLolz.
ReplyDeleteLol! Are they OO?
ReplyDeletewhich kin church be this
ReplyDeleteHahahaha.... I can just picture Don jazzy trying to choke himself with his pillow while he screams 'cmon dad,that wasn't necessary' and D'prince will be like 'Well I'm still the prince of efizzy', and the dad will be like 'yeah,I can take you down when I want' Hahahahahahaha.... Cute though,very cute foundation.....
ReplyDeleteWith those ears D Prince would have been more successful as the wings of an aircraft than a musician
ReplyDeleteLol white garment church
ReplyDeleteQuality Office Shirts and casual wears at affordable prices (Male and Female).
ReplyDeleteDelivery at your doorstep Nation wide.
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Quality Office Shirts and casual wears at affordable prices (Male and Female).
ReplyDeleteDelivery at your doorstep Nation wide.
2754B912, 08130373753
Whatsapp: 08034334692
Other items available:
Raulph Lauren Polos, Denim savage shirts, Jeans trousers,Chinoze, Pant Trousers, Round/ V neck, Jeans trousers
Tie- Complete set Curtis-Hawes and T.M Lewin
Italian Shoes etc.
He looks like a dumb ass here...lolz
ReplyDeleteHehehe... And it's Don Jazzy again
ReplyDeleteSo don jazzy na cele member
ReplyDeleteAm sure don jazzy will be like "daddy but y" lol
ReplyDeleteDon BABA J he didn't change much nice family
ReplyDeleteDaddy see as u scatter yansh opening
ReplyDeleteJuju priests
ReplyDeleteLmaoo
ReplyDeleteLmaoo,
ReplyDeleteWhite garment things
ReplyDeleteWhich kain worship be this one...eh hen, story done dey commot.
ReplyDeleteDoro what.....
ReplyDeleteLmao c Rabbi
ReplyDeleteLib freak
Choi
ReplyDeleteHustle and bustle of 9 month oau predegree,this weird baby might b dat of a celebrity with celebrity latest that would thrill u all on mrpaynesamuel.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteHustle and bustle of 9 month oau predegree,this weird baby might b dat of a celebrity with celebrity latest that would thrill u all on mrpaynesamuel.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteChoi! No be small Rabbi
ReplyDeleteWoli agba re ooo,.. ha! Haha! Haha!
ReplyDeleteNa cele don b?
ReplyDeleteWoooow..donjazzy has always had dis look...cute
ReplyDeleteThis is old times.., nice!
ReplyDeleteLadies and gentlemen welcome to my new blog:
naijafruitjuice.blogspot.com
Dey shld be prophets den. Lol
ReplyDeleteLool....Cele family.
ReplyDeleteA gus reminder from deir dad, always nice to kip old pics. Big don J hail U
ReplyDeleteNow I love Den more. Army of salvation Jazzy n Angels without wings d'prince. There is absolutely nfn wrong with their church. That its a white garment church doesn't mean its evil. The eternal sacred order of cherubim and seraphim as far as am concern is a spiritual n true God worshippers denomination. Jazzy u shd b a super apostle by now. #thumbs up 2 their dad. It means dey shd Neva forget aw dey started n der background. Cherubim pikin...... .......
ReplyDeleteDoro Rabbi.....Lol
ReplyDeleteWhat's wrong with the picture??? Cute family. I loverse
ReplyDeleteThis is a 'when your day decides to embarrass you' kinda post.
ReplyDeleteEnternal Sacred Order of Cherubim&Seraphim.#ESOCS. Don J! Nwa Orimolade
ReplyDeleteThe eternal sacred order of the cherubim and seraphim world wide. Founded by Saint Moses Orimolade . Linda tell your reader to stop sounding like people possesses with demons. This church has been in early 90s before all the new churches. Most of the founder of the new churches (Redeemed, deeper life) were members before they were called to open theirs . Is like your people only read your blog and are not exposed to anything useful. Stop condemning people's churches. Who told you that Becuae you attend non white garment church will make you get go haven. God knows those to is serving him. Don't be deceived . Cherubim pikin is alwaya proud to say it and Don Jazzy is a proud cherubim. He has never hiďden it Becuae he knew the truth. Hater of cherubim should worry about ur own self. Salvation is individual
ReplyDeleteSee don jazzy nose like frying pan.
ReplyDeleteVery funny, ndi uwe ocha
ReplyDeleteHahahahahahaha laugh wan kill me Don J I no fit look u desame way again, so na Cele u waka come from??? Cheiiiii dis ur papa sef why him fall ur hand like this
ReplyDeleteEwwww. His father decided to embarrass the living daylights outta them.
ReplyDeleteAll of you guys that are making vain comments abt collins enebeli and his sons based on d throw bk pics...hope u would do d same when u see bishop david oyedepo or pa enoch adeboye, kumuyi or davidabioye in d same uniform some years ago.....d things of d spiirit are spiritually discerned...judge not lest you be not judged...
ReplyDeleteGo do ur research