Ten years. It sounds like a long time — and in many ways, it is. But if you ask anyone in
this family what it truly feels like, the honest answer is this: some days, it feels like
only yesterday.
It has been a decade since we said our final goodbye to our beloved
Bonaventure Sixtus Obani — a man whose presence filled every room he
entered, not with noise or grandeur, but with something far more powerful: a quiet,
unshakeable dignity that made everyone around him feel safe, seen, and valued.
Time has moved forward, as it always must. But the values he stood for, the lessons he
taught without always using words, and the love he gave so freely — these have not moved.
They remain. Deeply rooted. Quietly present. Carried in us every single day.
"His life was not defined only by the years he lived, but by the depth of the impact he
made on every person privileged enough to know him."
This tenth anniversary is more than a date on the calendar. It is a sacred moment — a
deliberate pause in the rush of life — to gather, to reflect, and to remember. Not merely
to mourn his absence, but to celebrate a life that still speaks. A life that, ten years
on, continues to shape and inspire the people he left behind.
He was a man of quiet strength. Not the kind that demands attention, but the kind that
holds everything together when things feel uncertain. He had deep integrity — the sort
that does not bend under pressure or convenience. And his commitment to his family was
not occasional or circumstantial. It was the very core of who he was.
He believed in doing what was right, even when it was difficult. He believed in standing
firm in his principles when it would have been far easier to let them go. And above all,
he believed in treating every human being — regardless of their station — with dignity,
warmth, and genuine kindness.
To us, he was far more than a father or a family leader. He was a guide. A steady hand
in uncertain seasons. A voice of wisdom that did not shout, but was always worth listening
to. And even now, in the decisions we make and the way we choose to carry ourselves, his
influence is there — woven quietly into who we are.
Even in his absence, his voice remains — in the discipline he modelled, the compassion
he practised, the humility he lived, and in his unfailing reminder that family, above all
else, is what truly matters.
As we remember him today, we do so with hearts that are full — full of gratitude for the
gift of knowing him, full of pride for the legacy he entrusted to us, and full of the
quiet, bittersweet joy that comes from loving someone so deeply that missing them never
really goes away.
His story did not end ten years ago. It did not end with the final chapter of his own
life. It continues — in the family he nurtured, in the principles he passed on, in the
lives he touched without perhaps ever fully knowing the reach of his influence.
A Gathering of Family, Faith, and Fellowship
There is something profoundly moving about the sight of people coming together — not for
a celebration of achievement or a milestone of ambition, but simply for love. For memory.
For the quiet, communal act of saying: we have not forgotten.
This remembrance service was made even more meaningful by the presence of friends,
colleagues, faith communities, and well-wishers who travelled from near and far to stand
in solidarity with the Obani family. Their arrival was, in itself, a testimony — a
testament to the kind of life Bonaventure Sixtus Obani lived: one that drew people in
and kept them close, even long after he was gone.
"It was a beautiful reflection of the relationships built over time — relationships
grounded in service, leadership, and shared values that outlast any single moment."
Among those in attendance were members of the
Knights of St. John International (KSJI), Commandery 897, Delta State,
as well as representatives of the
Rotary E-Club Service Without Borders — communities to which
Izuchukwu Precious Obani has devoted meaningful service over the years.
Their presence spoke volumes. They were not there out of formality, but in recognition of
the person of Izuchukwu Precious Obani — his influence, his commitment to service, and
the impact he has made across different spheres of life.
The ceremony drew an extraordinary gathering of distinguished personalities, including
celebrated actor Kanayo O. Kanayo, royal highnesses, the
KSJI National President, vice chancellors from various institutions,
and friends and associates from the United Kingdom,
United States, Ghana, and Nigeria.
Knights from across the West African region were also represented.
And perhaps most importantly, it was a day that reminded us — all of us — of the
extraordinary power of unity. Of what it means to gather not in triumph, but in
tenderness. Not in noise, but in nearness. To sit together in remembrance, compassion,
and the shared, sacred fragility of being human.
Carrying the Legacy Forward
Ten years may have passed. But the legacy of Bonaventure Sixtus Obani
is not something that fades with time. It is not something that sits in a frame on a
wall or rests quietly in a memory. It is alive. Active. Present.
His teachings continue to guide us through choices we face every day — choices he will
never know about, but whose outcomes he shaped by the man he chose to be. His example
continues to challenge us: to live with purpose, to act with integrity, to carry
responsibility not as a burden but as a privilege.
"We honor him not only with words, but with the commitment to uphold the values he stood
for — and in doing so, we ensure that his memory is not only preserved, but lived."
Today, we do not simply gather to look back. We gather to recommit. To carry forward
everything he poured into us. To make sure that his story — the real story, the one
written not in obituaries but in lives — continues to unfold in each of us, in each
generation that follows.
That is perhaps the greatest tribute we could ever offer him: not flowers, not words,
not ceremony — but a life lived in a way that would make him proud.
Forever remembered. Forever honored. Forever in our hearts.