Ademola Olonilua and Eric Dumo
Not much
has been heard from Nollywood diva, Empress Njama, since she relocated
from Lagos to Abuja. However, the actress who was in town over the
weekend to celebrate her birthday and her foundation’s 10th year
anniversary told Saturday Beats that only God knows when she would get married and raise kids of her own.
She said, “If I had the opportunity to see God, I would ask him when I would get married and have kids of my own.”
The
delectable actress further said that the reason she relocated to Abuja
is because of her business and not because of Nollywood or controversies
that have trailed her in the past.
“I
relocated from Lagos to Abuja because of my business. My clothing line
was suited for women of the north and that is why I relocated to Abuja. I
make long dresses and my target is Abuja women. My move has not
affected my career as an actress. Even when I am 80 years old, I can
still play various roles. If I relied on Nollywood, I would not be able
to feed these children. My relocation has nothing to do with Nollywood.
Even if I was still in Lagos, I would have still faced my business till
it could stand on its own. The movie is always there and the roles still
keep coming in,” she said.
The
actress who is the founder of Empress Njama Foundation said that she
started the foundation out of the desire to put a smile on the faces of
less-privileged kids.
“Officially
my foundation is 10 years old but I started the initiative when I was
in secondary school to celebrate my birthday. When I was able to stand
on my own I was able to float the foundation, Empress Njama Foundation.
It is against my nature to take funds from people so I do everything
with my money. I usually have celebrations with less-privileged kids on
my birthday and every festive celebration like Valentine’s Day, October
1st, etc. I started in Lagos and I came back to Lagos after being in
Abuja for six years to celebrate a decade of founding my foundation. I
am so happy that most of the children have grown and are doing very
well. Sometimes I find it difficult to carry on but God has always been
faithful at the end. I built four blocks of classrooms for the children
because I know that most of these children are very intelligent
especially the blind ones.
“I have
adopted all the children to my foundation. In Abuja I have about 1,400.
Before I left Lagos, my foundation was catering for over 800 children.
Now that I came to celebrate here I saw that they were lacking in a lot
of things and I would change that. I don’t count my children, I count my
joy,” she said.
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