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Thursday, November 27, 2014

Fwd: SOYINKA: CANCER AWARENESS KEY TO CURE

FWD
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: ngwang gumne <t164ngng@gmx.co.uk>
Date: Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 12:36 PM
Subject: Re: SOYINKA: CANCER AWARENESS KEY TO CURE
To: ambasbay@googlegroups.com


Chief,
 
If you can, please, inform Prof. Soyinka that he is not alone.
What his Oncologist told him, is the same thing that mine told me:
"You will not die of it; you will die with it".
 
Let him remain cheerful. The problem is with the mind-not the illness.
It is always good to let others know that there are problems.
In Europe and other places, leaders announce their health problems;
in Africa, we hide illness-even when one dies.
 
It is time to be open on matters ike this.
 
ngwang gumne
 
Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2014 at 12:57 AM
From: "'Chief Charles A.Taku' via ambasbay" <ambasbay@googlegroups.com>
To: "Cameroon Politics" <cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com>, "Ambasbay CamerGoogleGroup" <ambasbay@googlegroups.com>
Subject: SOYINKA: CANCER AWARENESS KEY TO CURE
 
I was diagnosed of cancer- Soyinka
Inline image
',
 News   Inline image
',
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Inline image
',
Nobel Laureate, Prof. Oluwole Soyinka, today, opened up on his health status, saying he was diagnosed of cancer last December.
But an expert and Founder of African Cancer Centre, Lagos, Prof. Olu Williams, quickly assured Soyinka that he would "not die of cancer."
Williams, who revealed that Soyinka had the disease because of his old age, said the playwright will only "die with the ailment."
Soyinka, who revealed his cancer status at a press conference at the June 12 Cultural Centre, Abeokuta, Ogun State, said he had decided to open up so as to create awareness about cancer disease and to help people take measures to prevent it or seek prompt medical attention for cure.
The Nobel Laureate said he survived the silent killer disease because of early detection, treatment and proper dieting, adding that it has also dawned on him that the family has a history of cancer ailment.
He noted that his initial reaction when it dawned on that he has cancer was to see it as one of those challenges and nuisance that should be dealt with, adding that a time he considered it "an unwanted squatter in his body and had to get rid of it whether it is a slow growing one or malignant."
Although, "Kongi", who showed a crest to attest to his surviving the disease, did not reveal to reporters the nature of the cancer he was treated for, his son, Dr. Olaokun Soyinka, who is also the Commissioner for Health in Ogun State, later told The Nation his father was treated for "prostate cancer."

 

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The thing always happens that you really believe in; and the belief in a thing makes it happen.


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