“I Have An Uncle That Worked all His Life In Nigeria And Made Money That Most Nigerians, Even In 10 generations, Will Never See
He brought his wife to the U.S. Then one day, she brought up a case when he was cheating. Yeah, he did cheat, multiple times. But the last time he cheated was about 15 years ago.
She brought it up, divorced him, collected child support, took his two houses in the U.S., and still wanted to collect alimony.
You know what this man did? He self-deported himself back to Nigeria and told them, ‘Come and fight me here in Nigeria if you want alimony.’
Today, those two houses she took in the U.S., she couldn’t maintain them because she couldn’t afford to pay the property taxes. The government eventually took them back.
The man just sat down, locked up and said, ‘No problem. I would rather stay in Nigeria than come back to the U.S.’ He even said if she wants to send Interpol to Nigeria to arrest him, she’s free.
He stayed back in Nigeria and made up his mind that when his children turned 21 and above, they could come and look for their father.
After so many years, fortunately, the eldest daughter, who is now 24 years old, came back to look for him.
He explained everything to her. He told her he couldn’t tolerate what her mother did. He also told her that if she hated him, it was okay, and if she chose to forgive him, that was also okay.
The girl eventually forgave him, and they reconnected...”
- Man recounts how his uncle left the U.S. for Nigeria after a divorce battle over infidelity.
She brought it up, divorced him, collected child support, took his two houses in the U.S., and still wanted to collect alimony.
You know what this man did? He self-deported himself back to Nigeria and told them, ‘Come and fight me here in Nigeria if you want alimony.’
Today, those two houses she took in the U.S., she couldn’t maintain them because she couldn’t afford to pay the property taxes. The government eventually took them back.
The man just sat down, locked up and said, ‘No problem. I would rather stay in Nigeria than come back to the U.S.’ He even said if she wants to send Interpol to Nigeria to arrest him, she’s free.
He stayed back in Nigeria and made up his mind that when his children turned 21 and above, they could come and look for their father.
After so many years, fortunately, the eldest daughter, who is now 24 years old, came back to look for him.
He explained everything to her. He told her he couldn’t tolerate what her mother did. He also told her that if she hated him, it was okay, and if she chose to forgive him, that was also okay.
The girl eventually forgave him, and they reconnected...”
- Man recounts how his uncle left the U.S. for Nigeria after a divorce battle over infidelity.