Tuesday, 3 September 2013
Cashing In On The Lure Of Prophet TB Joshua
In Africa'slargest metropolis, the district of Ikotun
Egbe has turned into a boom town. The draw?
Temitope Balogun Joshua, one of Nigeria's richest
"super-pastors", whose church attracts 50,000
worshipers weekly – more than the combined
number of visitors to Buckingham Palace and the
Tower of London.
Seeking prosperity and life-changing spiritual
experiences, visitors flock from around the globe.
Enterprising Lagos residents – those not turfed out
by landlords turning their properties into hotels –
have transformed the rundown area into a hotbed of
business.
On a Saturday afternoon, traffic swirls around the
four-storey, giant-columned Synagogue Church of All
Nations. Delegates are pouring in for the following
day's service. "They should really build a branch in
South Africa – it's a long way to come and the hotels
here are so-so," says Mark, a sunburnt businessman
from Johannesburg, accompanied by two friends
from Botswana.
As the church's palm tree-lined entrance gives way
to a maze of skinny, unpaved roads, knots of touts
materialise. "In one year I made enough money to
buy my first car," says Chris, using a tattered hotel
brochure to mop his brow. He is paid 100 naira
(about 40p) for each client he brings in.
Sparkling new hotels rise incongruously among the
shacks. At one, with a logo suspiciously similar to the
Sheraton's, a new chef has recently been employed.
"He can cook food from Singapore, because we were
having a lot of guests from there who struggle with
Nigerian food," says the manager, Ruky, at a
reception desk framed by pictures of Joshua.
Tony Makinwa says most of his laundromat profits
come from tourists. "God has favoured my business.
People come here and fall in love with the place and
overstay their visits," he says.Also doing a roaring
trade are the international calling centres with
foreign visitor discounts, clothes shops offering
outfits to celebrate miracles, and the plastic chair
rentals that cater for church overspill.
The area's dirt streets are punctured by unfinished,
barnlike buildings as dozens of other churches offer
all-day worship services. Almost as many mosques
dot the area. Islam and Christianity are growing at
blistering paces across Africa, with Nigeria home to
the continent's most populous mix of both faiths.
Money-changer Sidi Bah has travelled thousands of
miles from Mali to continue his trade here. "I came
because I heard many people from many countries
visit. In one day I can change six or seven different
types of currency," he says. "There are more
mosques here than in my village in [Muslim] Mali."
Miracle-promising Pentecostal churches took root
across the continent in the 1980s, as African
economies were battered by falling world commodity
prices. Migrants poured into slums in search of jobs
and dreams.
Ruky has converted her cramped home into a 20-bed
lodging where mainly rural workers stay for 800 naira
a night. Mattresses are half price. "If you are sick like
me, you have no job, so you are used to sleeping on
the floor anyhow," says Andrew Olagbele, whose
spine was crushed by a car accident, lying on a
mattress in a crammed room. "I pray the Lord will
touch me tomorrow so I can walk again."
As dusk sets in, cars continue streaming in. A man
hanging from the open door of a car thundering
gospel songs waves copies of homemade CDs for
sale. Denis Kokou and his wife, a baby on her hip,
look on with weary smiles. "This is our first time
coming from [regional neighbour] Togo. We are so
happy to be here with our daughter."
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