Thursday, 28th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search
Breaking News:

Remembering Arisekola and his wits

By Lekan Alabi
20 February 2017   |   3:52 am
While settling disputes: “Let us be fair to all parties in a case, and remember the Judgment Day in heaven, when Allah shall apportion the deserved judgment to every soul.”

Late Arisekola Alao, Aare Musulumi of Yorubaland

Sir: February 14, Saint Valentine’s Day was the 72nd posthumous birthday of the late Alhaji AbdulAzeez Arisekola Akanmu Alao

A man of great intellect, kindness, friendliness, business acumen, energy and wits, Aare was most of the time, in his lifetime, providing relief to the poor, weak, hungry, the rich and famous. And all these he did with good cheer. I recall some of his quips as his mood or occasions dictated.

General daily attitude: “Tell Rafiu (the chief gatekeeper at Aare’s Oluwo home, Ibadan) to allow all visitors in. Allah will provide succour to us all.”

When a business deal sailed through: “God damn it. Even though I am unlettered, I know how to use my brain for good.” When angry or rejecting an offer: “Capital No! And no Jupiter will make me change my mind.”

While settling disputes: “Let us be fair to all parties in a case, and remember the Judgment Day in heaven, when Allah shall apportion the deserved judgment to every soul.”

Born on February 14, 1945, Aare attended Saint Luke’s Primary School, Adigun and ICC Primary School, Ibadan, where he topped his class throughout and obtained the Grade ‘A’ Primary School First Leaving Certificate in 1960, the year he left the village and came to live in Ibadan, his home town.

He successfully passed the entrance examinations into the famous Christ School, Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State and Lagelu Grammar School, Ibadan. He scored the highest marks in the entrance examination to Christ School, Ado-Ekiti, necessitating the expatriate principal of the school to write a letter to the young, precocious AbdulAzeez to appear before him, because no candidate had ever obtained such high grade marks in the school history before. When the young, rustic, but brilliant candidate appeared before the British principal, he explained that he would not be able to take up the admission offer, as his parents fortunes had dipped, due to his father, Pa AbdulRaheem Alao’s illness resulting in a slump of his cocoa business. A scholarship offer by the school to Aare was not allowed by fate to be utilised by him.

Nonetheless, the determined AbdulAzeez studied privately Quranic, Arabic and Western education, and emerged a first class product of all. In the early 1960’s, Aare joined his late uncle, Alhaji Karimu Olasupo Jenrola, at the famous Gbagi Business District of Ibadan as an apprentice trader. After successfully understudying his uncle, he started the sale of Gammalin 20 vide the incorporation of his Azeez Arisekola Trading Company in 1961 with a loan of Three Hundred and Ten Pounds ($310) given to him by an acquaintance of Alhaji Jenrola, the late Mr. Olatunji Owodunni.

For displaying the qualities of a future business magnate, impetus for hard work, integrity and creativity, the Western District Manager of Imperial Chemical Industry (ICI), Mr. P.K. Hampel, a Briton, took the young AbdulAzeez under his wings. Mr. Hampel, setting all formalities aside, appointed Aare a dealer for ICI products in the now-defunct Western Region of Nigeria in 1969. By 1970, Aare received a commission of one Thousand Pounds ($1,000.00).

In 1972, he registered his motor company, Lister Motors, becoming the star dealer for the popular Japanese brand, Datsun. It was from that era of business boom that the late Arisekola Alao became the unstoppable merchant, philanthropist and socialite.

He died in his London, UK home on Wednesday, June 18, 2014.

Lekan Alabi.

0 Comments