Saturday, November 26, 2011

A quiet Thanksgiving...

How was your Thanksgiving?

We had a ...


A quiet breakfast at home with the 4 of us...

And then to the lake house with friends who've adopted us the last 7 years. 
Ms Jane and the two of us at her Leeds lake home...
Friends who have in turn become family to us and us to them...
We join in the anticipation and the preparation of thanksgiving.
Each family unit brings a dish, this time we took the cranberry orange sauce and the corn soufflĂ©...
A lot of yumminess to go around.

And then peace and tranquility on the lake...

All "fed up" and ready to drive back to Montgomery...
How was your thanksgiving?

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 Funke Abolade, M.D
 Social/publicity Secretary

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving

Preview
If you want to see the full animated card, pls click on this link Giving Thanks Today and Always..especially if you didnt get the card already.
E ku Odun, e ku iyedun o. Emi a se opo e o. 
Wherever you are, whether with family, on the road or at home, we all have plenty to be thankful for, regardless of religion or creed. 
We look forward to celebrating our own Ajodun in fine style in a few weeks.  Ki Olorun o so gbogbo wa di igba ajodun wa o. Amin.

Go easy on the second helpings of that turkey and sweet potato casserole!

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Funke Abolade, M.D

Social/Publicity Sec.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Olojo ibi!

A 10th birthday celebration for one of our kids! 

Olojo ibi, Ijo kan e o, se were, ko da 'mi l'ohun...
Eyin ore, e wa ba jo o, se were ke da'mi l'ohun...


Were you there at the 10th birthday celebration of 
Oluwaseyori Adagunodo? O le ku o, ija ore!


Oluwaseyori Adagunodo, the celebrant in traditional Yoruba iro and buba
It was held during the last weekend in October at one of the hotels in Montgomery, Alabama.


The celebrant herself looked radiant and smiled plenty for the cameras!

2nd from left, Mrs Adagunodo, mom of the celebrant and friends.


Our president, Dr Oluyinka Adediji and other members, Mr and mrs Babatunde were in attendance at the party, supporting the Adagunodo family. (see below pics)




B'o se ye k'o ri ni yen. E ku aduro ti.

A  a pe fun ara wa o.

Happy Birthday to Yori and many happy returns!


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Funke Abolade

Social/Publicity Secretary

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Happy Eid al Aldha to our members on Sunday, 6th Nov, 2011!

From the rest of us to our fellow members of the muslim faith, we wish you a very happy Eid al - Adha wherever you are and celebrating it! Emi a se opo re o. Amin.

Eid al-Adha, the Festival of Sacrifice, will likely fall on Nov. 6, 2011 in the United States. One of two feast festivals celebrated by Muslims, Eid al-Adha falls on the 10th day of the Islamic calendar’s last month, Dhu al-Hijjah. Eid al-Adha concludes the annual pilgrimage to Mecca known as the Hajj
The festival commemorates Abraham's willingness to follow God's command to sacrifice his son Ishmael and Ishmael's consent to being sacrificed. Today, it is is marked by slaughtering animals to feed the poor. Coming at the end of the Hajj, a journey of dedication and purification, Eid al-Adha is understood as an opportunity for second chances.

May the Lord of second chances and new beginnings look kindly on us Nigerians and allow us a new beginning. Amen.

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Funke Abolade, M.D.


Social/publicity Secretary

Friday, November 4, 2011

A homecoming...

E ku ile o.

A week ago today, we made the 11 hour non-stop trip from Atlanta to Lagos, back home to the land where I was born, the land of our ancestors. My fatherland.

Murtala Mohamed Airport, Lagos, Nigeria.
And what a homecoming it was, both for us and the children, for whom it was only their second time - a return visit for their paternal grandfather's 80th birthday celebration, and an opportunity to see my parents..

Grandpa on his 80th birthday with Tobi & Tomi in Ikirun
Grandma Ibadan (above) and Grandpa Ibadan below with writer 

Writer & kids and brother in law,  Ikirun.  Osun State

Tunde, Tobi, Tunde's Uncle, Dejo and Grandpa Ikirun.
I won't go into all the cliches about Nigeria ( re: water, electricity, transportation, security, etc) - they remain all true and a long discussion for another day. My comment and focus really is on the seemingly indefatigable, optimistic spirit of our people, who soldier on, despite the odds stacked against them, and the odds are legion.

On they go, about the business of existing in a society such as ours. When you ask how long it might be for the traffic to start moving again, they say cheerfully "why, look - it's already showing signs of moving up ahead!" - (not the reality that you are looking at and it does take another hour to move.) Power shortage? " Ah, ko nii pe de ni isin yi" (i.e it won't take long for the power to come on again, meaning anywhere from hours to days - an eternity when you are sweating buckets & mosquitoes are having a feast at your expense.) The car is making an explosive sound and sending out noxious plumes of carbon emissions that put the entire state of california to shame? "A a lo wo ta ba de ile, Ko si ohun to se motor, se bi ohun l'on rin yen. E ma worry"

It is a "glass is half full" view of their current situation, about which they are powerless to change much, at least not in that instant that you are asking the questions. It takes some time & thought to understand why the human spirit sometimes resorts to seeing things in that light. It is one of nature's built-in protective mechanisms. You know why? The alternative view - "the glass is half empty" variety, is a harsh reality that most can not withstand on the daily basis that they have to deal with it, i.e a reality in which the answer to the question "when will traffic start to move again?" is "who knows, we might be here for hours". Who can go on indefinitely against those staggering and depressing odds? i.e without carrying around a heavy bag of optimism, and the prayer that "things will be better in a minute, you wait and see..."

So. I return to my adopted home, glad to be here, yet wistfully longing for the best to come to pass now, for the place I once belonged...



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Funke Abolade

Social/publicity Secretary