Mrs.
Mary Abah is a lawyer, banker and wife of a former Minister of Interior, Mr.
Humphrey Abah. She shares her experience with FRIDAY OLOKOR, Punch
on her challenge of being in marriage for 23 years without a child and the
support she got from her husband.
Congratulations
on the arrival of your baby 23 years after marriage. Did you ever think it was
going to be like this?
Before
I got married, my view of the marriage institution was that marriage was a
sanctuary; a place where a woman could actualise her dream together with her
partner. I understood very early that marriage usually gives some form of
security and the expectation was that in it, one should blossom, be fruitful
and multiply generally as the Bible says. That was basically how I saw marriage
in my youthful age because I finally married at the age of 27 and I was still
quite young.
In
essence, you did not anticipate the challenge of having a baby…
No,
I didn’t anticipate it, the truth is that as a young child who was brought up
by a very strict mother, I saw life as a bit of calculation: a sort of ‘1+1 =2
and 2+2=4.’ So if you get married, you expect that after nine months, as they
say, you will have a child or children. My challenge has made me very sensitive
to what parents and well wishers normally do at wedding ceremonies. During a
wedding, people start talking about gathering again for a naming ceremony after
nine months. They say it as a joke but that is the genesis of pressure on
married women. So, if yours doesn’t happen after nine months, there is a question
mark there and you begin to fret and other problems come in.
Did
you have any health challenge when you were growing up that could have delayed
your giving birth?
Not
really, it was much later in life that the health challenge came. I have been a
banker since 1987 when I undertook my National Youth Service Corps. I served in
a bank as a lawyer. I continued to work in the bank thereafter. Because I ended
up in the banking industry, I decided to update myself in everything related to
the industry.
During
these trying moments in your life, did you feel that somebody somewhere was
responsible for your predicament?
The
truth is that in the whole of the 23 years, I refused to focus on such
things. I didn’t worry about who it was, what it was, where it was or how
it was. I did not want to get myself involved in what would cause me anguish
for the rest of my life.
You
are from Cross River State while your husband is from Kogi State. Was there
resistance from your parents when you initially wanted to marry Mr. Humphrey
Abbah?
The
way we met each other was very peculiar and our marriage was also peculiar. Our
families did not actually affect us. They were not there when we met and when
we started courting. Our families were not so involved and when it came to the decision
of marriage, we took that decision on our own but involved our families later.
My husband is not somebody that you can force to do something which he doesn’t
believe in. So, even when we got married, that was already established in his
family. When he said this was the young lady he wanted to marry, I don’t think
he had too much opposition. If there was any at all, it was very insignificant.
The truth is that my father-in-law was a very lovely person; a gentleman who
had a lot of respect for his son. By the time we got married, his mother
was late and my parents were late too. So, his father was the focal point and
the cordial relationship they had made it easy. The rest of my family and the
elders gave us a little bit of tough time as you would expect in inter-cultural
marriages. But it didn’t take us time to be able to woo them to our side and
that was it.
At
what stage did you begin to get worried?
My
first signal was when I was 30 years and three years in my marriage. At first,
it didn’t really worry me because as a career person, I felt we should take it
in our stride. I was already beginning to make waves in the banking industry
and the demands of the job were already telling on me. Also in my innocence, I
didn’t really feel it was an issue. But by the time I was 30 and nothing had
happened, I asked myself, ‘what’s going on here?’ Then I began to be conscious
of it and started making deliberate efforts to get pregnant. Before this time,
there was no real effort. When the pregnancy was not forthcoming, I began to
suspect that there was a real problem. But as usual, I went to the doctors,
they said there was no problem and suggested that I should give myself time
because I was a busy lady. But after about a year, I went back and they gave me
one or two interpretations as to what could be wrong and we started tackling it
from there and it came to the point that by 2011, the doctors were saying
nothing could be done.
Which
was your first point of call, church or hospital?
By
1991 when we got married, we became born again and the church had become a
focal point and integral part of our lives. We were praying and fasting; good
relationship with the leadership of the church had become part of our daily
lives and so the church was always there for us. The church was never against
consulting orthodox doctors. The only no-go area for us was to seek help
outside God. So I think that was why very early in the journey of this crisis,
we knew that anything outside God was not an alternative to take at all.
During
these periods, did the idea of stealing a baby come to you?
I
can say that I never really had the thought of doing that. The advice I
had was different; it had to do with visiting witchdoctors. But the idea of
stealing a baby never came to me; it never crossed my mind. I think sometimes
the friends that you have determine the kind of advice you get. For me, I never
had that category of friends. I did not even have a lot of friends. I can
actually count them on my fingers. But the rest of them were my professional
colleagues and church members. I surrounded myself critically with those I felt
could help me in my journey in life. I didn’t have that crowd that could really
derail me in that sense. But there were general advice of ‘a Baba somewhere,’
‘a doctor somewhere’ and many others. There were times, through text
messages, out of their concern for me, some of the women politicians would make
suggestions that one Baba somewhere could do it. Most of the time, I
would politely decline and smile. But I would never take it against those
people because somehow I felt they were just trying to help. But I needed to
communicate to them that such help didn’t suit me. When they realised that it
was ‘a no-go area’ for us, most of them backed off. For us, we knew that we
needed to shut out the world to be able to succeed in this journey.
Did
you try IVF?
Yes,
I did it many times. By the sixth time, it was very obvious that it could only
be God that would help us. If you look at the Bible, you will realise that God
uses what he has created to solve problems. At first, it was a problem for me
coming to terms even with IVF and particularly when I had done it once, twice
and three times and it failed, I was thinking that maybe that was how God
wanted me to go. Sometimes I would agonise over it, sometimes I would pray and
sometimes I would even face the battle with my God because I also understood
that faith was also very important and faith also involves work. I understood
clearly that you needed to activate your faith and so when I began to see the
failure of IVF, I felt that was part of it. I would pray and I would move, but
each time it failed. I was actually confused because in your journey as a
Christian, you grow little by little; you don’t just become a mighty woman
overnight. It is from the experiences and how you exercise the word of God that
you become confident in what you are doing.
During
these times, did you lose interest in having sex with your husband as most
women who had faced similar experiences in the past would do?
You
see, if you read the Bible clearly, there was only one woman who had a baby
without sex and that is Mary, the mother of Jesus. I only said there is only
one Mary, the mother of Jesus Christ. All of us can’t be like Mary. So where is
your action and where is your faith? You must work with your faith; there’s
nothing about faith that is easy. Because you understand spiritually that the
physical aspect must be part of that journey, then you must keep that fire
burning, you must keep trying because without it, you cannot be pregnant. So
you will find ways to make sure that it keeps going and with that, what you are
asking from God will materialise. If not, you are wasting your time and you
cannot blame God who had said ‘I have made man, I have made woman for
creation’. Out of it, the next generation will come and you are sitting down to
say you have lost interest, then don’t blame God at the end of the day. You
will work and whether you like it or not, find time to make way and the Lord
will see you through. I think He has shown us that it is good not to give up.
There
have been cases where, due to pressures from in-laws, some women are forced to
marry wives for their husbands. Did you contemplate this?
No,
not at all. As beautiful as child adoption is, my husband refused it. That is
the only area of thought that came to me. Not because I felt I needed to give
up hope but I felt it might calm the atmosphere because I had also read
situations where adoption preceded the gift of children in families. For me,
adoption was not a problem; I was willing to do that if it was going to calm
the atmosphere. I also understood that the atmosphere that you are in could
either help you or scatter everything. You needed to be calm, have a good home
and you needed to enjoy marriage for these things to happen. If you are in a
tense situation, it would only prolong matters. It was only adoption that we
considered, but my husband said no and kept saying, ‘ours will come.’ We didn’t
think of another woman. But the beautiful thing about it is that God kept him
away from that decision. I am an Efik woman from Cross River State and my
husband is from Igalla in Kogi State. We used to joke that he crossed many
rivers before he could find me. But a lot then believed that I probably gave
him ‘love potion’ to be able to keep him and his faith surprised me.
Was
there pressure from your in-laws to get another wife for your husband?
As
I said, there was no room for that. Nobody could look into Humphrey Abah’s
face, whether in my family or his and make such suggestion. The only person who
could do that was my father-in-law. He backed off after bringing up the issue
of the delay initially in our marriage. It will be a lie for me to say there
was no pressure from my family or his family. They were only concerned about
how things would be better for us through the efforts we were putting in.
Outside of that, there was no pressure at all.
How
did you feel when you were told that you were pregnant?
When
they told me I was pregnant, I screamed and cried in the hospital and everyone
present rose up and gave thanks to the Lord. Since then, the story has been one
testimony after another. But that was not all, when I was to put to bed, I was
told there might be complications as a result of all the operations I had done.
They said that might make it a very difficult and dangerous birth. Yet, the
Lord saw me through. It feels great and I thank the Lord for wiping away my
tears and making me a mother at last. It is a dream I have had since I married
at the age of 27. Now, I am more than 49 years old, it has taken a long time
but the Lord has done it for me. I have shed a lot of tears. Our story is like
that of Abraham and Sarah. I am already in menopause but I told God that
if He did it for Sarah and gave her womb the strength to conceive, then He
would give my womb the same strength. Even when doctors in London told me in
2011 that nothing could be done, I knew that it is only Him (the Lord) that
could help me. I focused on the Lord and He did it for me.
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