Wednesday, December 25, 2013

CHRISTMAS WISH FOR MR. PRESIDENT GOODLUCK JONATHAN!!

I wish Mr. President, Goodluck Jonathan and family a happy Christmas and peaceful new year 2014. May all the bad bad politicians troubling you leave PDP in peace,May God wipe your memory from the minds of all those writing you insulting letters. They will write no more come 2014. May you continue the good work of transforming Nigeria, May God put confusion in the mist of those ganging up against you, they will hear rumor and start fighting themselves while you are busy working for Nigerians with the mandate all Nigerians gave you. Those looking down on you today, will mobilize the electorate for you come 2015. The Lord will prepare a table before you in the present of your enemies, the more your enemies the bigger your table. In all ages God does not work with majority, the fewer the better. Oga Jonathan please read Judges 7 God reduced the armies of Israel from 32000 to 300 to enable Him show the world that He is the one that rules in the affairs of men. Their weapon of war was only Trumpets and as soon as they blew the trumpets, their enemies started fighting themselves. God has decided to prune down the number of people pretending to be with you in PDP to a reasonable number to show that your victory in 2015 like in the past elections you won is not by your power or might but by the Sprit of the living God. Please don't make effort to stop those who wish to leave, the fewer the better. In the eyes on men, they see democracy as a game of numbers, the one with the highest number of followers wins, but not so with God. Keep believing in the God that led you in the past, He will lead you now and in future, He is the pillar of fire by the night and a pillar of cloud by the day, You can never understand Him, for He is a miracle working God. Once again I wish you the best of the season.In Jesus name amen,!!!
Thank you and God bless,
Harris Eluwah.

I know Jesus and He is my all in all!!

Once again I want the world to hear this!!!
Jesus the savior of the world!!
IN CHRIST ALONE MY HOPE IS FOUND!!
NO GUILT IN LIFE, NO FEAR IN DEATH-
THIS IS THE POWER OF CHRIST IN ME;
FROM LIFE'S FIRST CRY TO FINAL BREATH,
JESUS COMMANDS MY DESTINY.
NO POWER OF HELL, NO SCHEME OF MAN,
CAN EVER PLUCK ME FROM HIS HAND;
TILL HE RETURNS OR CALLS ME HOME-
HERE IN THE POWER OF CHRIST I WILL STAND.

I HAVE TRIED THIS CHRIST, AND FOUND NO FAULT IN HIM.
I HAVE NO REASON TO DENY HIM,
YES HE IS MY ALL IN ALL, AMEN!!!
Merry Christmas to Nigeria!!!

Monday, December 16, 2013

God IS AWESOME!!!




God is awesome!!
In our country some people's salary is N18,000.00 per month.
Another group earn ........................... N36,000 .00 per month
yet other earn................................. N100,000.00 per month
Some other earn...............................N500,000.00 per month
Going a little higher........................N1,000,000.00 per month
Semi super ....................................N2,000,000,00 per month
At the NASS we hear some get......N27,000,000,00 per month
Ironically those that are among the first group, the down trodden, have as much as 8 children all clamped into one dingy room in the slump of each state while those on super scale may have a child, possible a daughter. and live in a 20 bed room mansion. Little wonder, the latter are always going on foreign tour with their child tucked in a hostel of a Christian School . I was amazed while coming back from work late one day at the Ikeja GRA about 50% of all the building I walked pass showed signs that nobody stays there.I ran into a gate man in one of the buildings who was whiling away time in front of a mansion and asked why there is no light in their compound, he said that Oga traveled and while away, nobody puts on the generator in the compound. He said, as soon as Oga comes back, he will resign because he is scared of staying here alone.
We all buy from the same market, same fuel, same light from NEPA. some very rich feed their dog with more than N100,000.00 per month? Human beings are wicked, little wonder, it repented God that he created man, because his heart is evil continually. The very poor ran to Church and Mosque to seek solace from his creator, and there he met another set of wicked men. As it is with politicians so it is with highly placed men of God in Nigeria.But unfortunately they can not outsmart God, how can you explain that some people trek to Church hungry, believing that some one will help him, and at the end of service all he get is, just pray,God will help you. Right in the same Church, some men of God no longer touch Naira, they spend foreign currencies. In this country that is regarded as on the third Countries of the world, a politician buys a car worth N600,000,000 and he may have more than 3 of such cars parked in his house. Many die in the hospitals because they cannot afford medical bill of N15,000 What a shame. Some of our hospitals have turned police cell.where people unable to pay their hospital bills including women who had a normal deliver are detained. There is on question I want to ask Nigerian BILLIONAIRES what happens to your Billions after you die? God is watching us in this country. What ever achievement you made for yourself, does not count after your death, what counts is the number of life you helped while on earth. Goodmorning.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

SOUTH AFRICA ;- LIFE AFTER MANDELA!!!



SOUTH AFRICA LIFE AFTER MANDELA













Nelson Mandela.

The death of Nelson Madiba Mandela in his country home of South Africa on Thursday 5th December this year has brought an end to an era in the liberation struggle against Apartheid regime. He was once regarded as a terrorist, but later become an icon for peace across the Globe. His battle against Apartheid in South Africa made him spend 27years behind bars.  He and the then President FW de Klerk, supervised the abolition of legal racial segregation in the country which earned them the Nobel Peace Prize. His death at the age of 95 has prompted tributes from around the world, with about 100 world’s sitting and past head of state, attending his memorial service.
After his release from prison, he won South Africa’s first all-race elections to become the country’s first black president; this earned him the most respected statesman of his generation,  liberating and unifying most of its people, having been voted for by both minority whites and majority blacks. He presided over the affairs of South Africa for a term of four years and handed over power to Tabo Mbeki whom he believed will maintain his none revenge philosophy  throughout the country.
However his struggle that released more that 80 percent of the black population from bondage has not led to greater equality across the Nations populace. Only a small minority of the liberated have joined the minority ruling class to have access to the reins of economic power.
 Mr. Mandela leaves behind a South Africa where political power is firmly in the hands of the majority, and this has helped steer the country away from what seemed to be the biggest risk at the time of the country’s transition to democracy: a race war that pitted blacks against whites.
But economic power is still largely in white hands. Unemployment, particularly among the young black people who make up a vast population here, is higher than ever. Inequality has grown, as a small group of black elites has joined wealthy whites in the upper echelons of society, leaving the masses far behind. The anger over this state of affairs, after building up for years, boiled over in August 2012 when the police killed 34 striking miners in the country’s worst police violence since the end of apartheid.
What is currently happening to South Africans is a far cry from the early days of Mr. Mandela’s release from prison after 27 years in 1990 and his victory in South Africa’s first non-racial election four years later.
It will be recalled that Mr. Mandela said in his inaugural address. “Let there be peace, let there be work, bread, water , salt and let there be justice for all”  It turned out these promises would be tough to keep, even for a man with Mr. Mandela’s gifts.
Mr. Mandela pledged in 1997 that South Africa would avoid the “formation of predatory elites that thrive on the basis of looting national wealth and the entrenchment of corruption.”
And yet that has happened. The African National Congress has slowly gone from a liberation movement to almost oppressive political machine. Corruption is endemic. Deep ties between big business and politicians have reinforced the perception that those in power seek only their own enrichment.
 In Soweto on Friday, the day after Mr. Mandela died, South African flags were few, but the emblem of the African National Congress — a hand clutching a spear on a field of black, green and yellow — was ubiquitous. “This Mandela belongs to the A.N.C.,” a man said through a microphone.
 Although Nelson Mandela preached tolerance and reconciliation, there are still divisions within South Africa. Some have warned that without his presence those divisions may spark violence.
But even members in a poor Afrikaner enclave appear cautiously optimistic about their future.
“At the end of the day we should listen to what Mandela taught us. And he was like always letting us join together and not be racist. And we must take that example. And people must take that example all over and just try and follow it,” said resident Sandra Batha.
When Mandela was elected the country’s first black president in 1994 many Afrikaners were uneasy about life under a black-majority government after decades of white rule.
But his talk of a united South Africa has commanded respect among wealthier Afrikaners such as Jan Bosman, Chief Secretary of the rights group Afrikaner bond:
“There are certain things wrong in this country at the moment and we must fix it. As Afrikaners and I speak from the Afrikaner community we are more than willing to assist and help build this country and make it what it can be. I think. I think that is what Mr. Mandela wanted.”
But some Afrikaners say they just want to be left alone with their own culture and language. They believe as long as they are law abiding they should not need permission to act as they do – an ideal they say Mandela himself respected.