Ijaw Leaders express grief over demise of Anthony George-Ikoli’s mother

Ijaw Leaders express grief over demise of Anthony George-Ikoli's mother

By Our Reporter

LAGOS (CONVERSEER) – Leaders of the Ijaw Nation have expressed grief over the demise of Anthony George-Ikoli’s mother, Mrs Elsie Ajayi Ikoli.

In a statement on Monday, the Ijaw leaders paid their deepest and heartfelt condolences, saying that the prayers of the Ijaw people are with Chief Anthony George-Ikoli and his family at this difficult time.

‘’Our prayers are with you and the entire bereaved family because of this irreparable loss. Though a painful exit of a good mother, but God loves her more.’’

The statement by the Lagos State Chairman, Tonye Leonard Harry, and the State Secretary, Elayelagha Golden Ambakaderemo, commiserated with Anthony George-Ikoli over the demise of his beloved mother, Mrs Elsie Ajayi Ikoli.

‘’Please accept our heartfelt condolences and may you find comfort and strength during this difficult time.’’

The statement by the leadership of the Ijaw National Congress (INC), Lagos chapter, urged Anthony George-Ikoli and his relatives to draw strength from their mother’s illuminating attributes of honesty, discipline, resilience, and joyful spirit.

‘’Her sweet memories will forever be etched in our minds’’ the statement added.

Elsie Ajayi Ikoli departed this earth on Tuesday, September 2, 2025, in the quiet of her Lagos home.

A statement in Lagos described Elsie Ajayi Ikoli as a good mother, a church servant and a quiet revolution.

“Mama Ayo, as friends, family members and neighbours called her, turned duty into destiny, grief into gospel, and labour into love.’’

The statement from the Ernest Sissei Ikoli Foundation called Madam Elsie Ajayi Ikoli a woman of the altar, industry and unyielding grace.

“Madam Elsie Ajayi Ikoli was born beneath the golden skies of Kaduna on June 24, 1932.”

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The statement highlighted Mama Ayo’s intellect, resilience, wisdom and sobriety.

“Mama Ayo’s mind was a boundless library. She devoured books not for ornament, but for illumination — a habit that would later become the quiet engine of her wisdom.”

The statement issued in Lagos by the Executive Vice Chairman of the Ernest Ikoli Foundation, Chief Anthony George- Ikoli (SAN), highlighted professionalism, apprenticeship in nation-building and her role as Executive Assistant to the First Editor of Daily Times, Publisher of African Messenger, President of the Nigerian Youth Movement, one of the founders of Action Group (AG) and representative of Lagos in the Legislative Council, Ernest Ikoli.

“Mama Ayo moved with quiet precision behind the scenes of history. While Ernest drafted editorials that stirred the conscience of a colony awakening to freedom, Mama Ayo kept the rhythm of his days — managing correspondence, organising schedules, shielding one of the activists of Nigeria’s political history from distraction.”

Well known as a tireless and cheerful woman who could be counted on, the statement said Elsie avoided the spotlight that focused on Ernest Sissei Ikoli through his long political career.

“In her presence, chaos yielded to order. In her silence, purpose found its voice. She did not seek the spotlight, but stood steadfast in its penumbra — a dutiful woman, an unseen architect of legacy, ensuring that the man who helped forge Nigeria’s voice never lost his own.”

The statement recalled the period when the mantle of the sole provider fell upon her shoulders.

“Mama wore it not as a burden, but as a covenant. She became a staff member and major distributor for Abbott Pharmaceuticals during its pioneering years in Nigeria — a time when Similac and Isomil were not just products, but promises whispered into the cribs of a hopeful, growing nation. With grit and grace, she out-distributed her peers, not through force, but through faithfulness – waking before dawn, returning long after dusk, her arms laden not just with formula tins, but with the nourishment of futures. In her, Abbott did not merely find a distributor — they found a disciple of diligence, a woman who treated every delivery as a divine assignment.”

A mother of all and a study in humility, the statement recollected how life exacted its cruel toll on Elsie Ajayi Ikoli.

“The loss of two of her children carved a canyon in her soul — a grief so profound it could have extinguished her. But Mama Ayo did not retreat. She ascended. In the hallowed halls of the Salvation Army, Marina Corps, she entered into a sacred covenant with God — a vow of everlasting service. There, as Welfare Keeper of the Home League Unit, she washed altar linens until they gleamed like morning snow, believing that holiness resided not only in prayer, but in purity of preparation. She folded hope into every crease, ironed devotion into every hem. Her hands, which once balanced ledgers and stacked crates, now cradled communion cloths with the reverence of a priestess.”

The statement emphasised her role in the women’s ministries.

“Madam Elsie Ajayi Ikoli was a pillar in the Women’s and Mothers’ Ministries, where her counsel was sought not for its volume, but for its virtue. And beyond the church walls, she poured her spirit into the Nembe Women Society (Lagos Branch) — gathering daughters of the Niger Delta in diaspora, weaving community from memory, stitching solidarity with stories. She did not merely lead — she mothered. She did not merely organise — she sanctified.”

Blessed with a rich and agile mind, the statement said Mama Ayo’s worldview was sculpted by sweat and scripture.

“Madam Elsie Ajayi Ikoli believed work was worship, excellence an echo of the divine, and failure not a full stop — but a comma in God’s longer sentence. Like the ant she so admired, she saw the cathedral in the crumb, the empire in the errand. She got up early, humming hymns to the rhythm of responsibility. She taught by presence: “Do it yourself, Do it well and Do it now.” Not as a command, but as a creed.”

The statement lavished praise on her for the quiet revolution.

“Her altar remains spotless. Her hands, though stilled, still shape us. Her name — Elsie — “God’s Promise” — echoes in every life she lifted. Rest now, Mama. The Rock you carried has become the monument. The vision you served has become a victory. Well done, good and faithful servant.”

Ernest Ikoli fought alongside great nationalist leaders like Herbert Macaulay, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Obafemi Awolowo and Ahmadu Bello in the struggle for the political independence of Nigeria.

The Ernest Ikoli Foundation highlights the values of the late First Republic politician, nationalist and pioneering journalist, Ernest Sissei Ikoli, to inspire present and future generations.

It also promotes the ideals of integrity, unity and service that the late leader championed.

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