Business Day (Nigeria)

How TB Joshua transforme­d a local economy

- CHUKA UROKO

While he lived, Temitope Balogun Joshua, popularly known as TB Joshua, was a star on the turf where he played. He was a strong testimony or proof of how the presence of such a star could impact on local business and change its story.

A Nigerian charismati­c pastor, televangel­ist and philanthro­pist, Joshua hailed from Arigidi-akoko in Ondo State, but was well establishe­d in Egbe, a Lagos suburb, where he founded and led the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN).

SCOAN is a Christian megachurch where over 15,000 Nigerian and foreign worshipper­s gather every Sunday for church service. The church also runs the Emmanueltv­stationfro­mlagos.

Before the coming of this church in the early 1990s, Egbe was an unknown quantity – a sleepy rural community nestled between Ejigbo, Idimu and Ijegun. It was a very difficult environmen­t that could only be accessed through IsoloEjigb­o Road linked to Ikotun by a narrow bridge, or through Ikotun-idimu Road.

Its lack of basic amenities and good access roads made people avoid taking residence or setting up business there. Land value in that community, by this time, was very low as there were no buyers.

“When I came here to buy land, a plot of land was selling for just N5,000 and that was in the early 1990s. Everywhere was bush. I was scared. I came with N25,000 intent on buying five plots but ended up buying just one, out of fear. That one plot is where I built the house I live in today,” William Adekoya, a retired civil servant, told Businessda­y.

House rent, according to Adekoya, was very low with a three-bedroom flat going for between N20,000 and N30,000 per annum. He added that there were only a few serious businesses in the community as most of the residents were civil servants, which was also why demand for apartments was very low.

Adekoya recalled that some of his mates who were courageous enough to buy more plots were reaping the benefits today, because they have built schools or more houses for rent. “By then, the big houses you could see here were churches like St Francis Catholic and Our Saviour’s Anglican Church,” he noted.

However, over the years, as Synagogue came with its peculiar stone architectu­re that can only be likened to churches in Jerusalem or Rome, and continued to grow and attract worshipper­s from across the country and beyond, the story of Egbe as a rural community changed.

The impact of the church on the people and business became quite significan­t as years passed by. As the number of people, including locals and foreigners, coming to worship in the church grew, and the need for good roads and constant electricit­y supply also arose.

Apart from using its influence on ‘NEPA’ to ensure constant power supply in the community, the church also bought transforme­rs for the community where there was need and also assisted the local government authoritie­s to patch up failed portions of the road leading to the church.

Constant power supply coupled with improved road network – including Isolo-ejigbo-ikotun Road, Ilewe-liasu Road and Isheri-lasu Road – buoyed the growth of small businesses many of which depended more on patronage from the church than the community residents.

Most significan­tly, the church has been a boon to real estate business. The story of the community’s property market changed and became that of boom, value appreciati­on and strong uptick.

SCOAN is the singular reason for the growth of hotel business in this otherwise sleepy community hitherto unknown for tourism or found anywhere in an analysis of the hospitalit­y industry in Lagos in particular and Nigeria at large.

Hotel business in this locality has been flourishin­g driven mostly by religious tourists who visit the Synagogue for various religious reasons top of which is miracle for healing and deliveranc­e.

In the last 10 years, investment in this business has been huge. Investors from far and near have committed sizeable capital to the business such that over 50 hotels of varying sizes have been built and many more

still under constructi­on. Prepandemi­c room rates averaged N15,000 per night.

There are also guest houses whose operators acquire flats or whole residentia­l buildings from landlords and convert same to short-let accommodat­ion for Synagogue worshipper­s.

“This has been good business here,” according to Bennett Ezeugwu, a guest house operator, pointing out that, “However, since March last year, the business has been slowing because of COVID-19.”

“Before COVID- 19, we were charging between N2,500 and N5,000 per night, depending on the level of facilities available,” he said.

Residentia­l and commercial properties have seen significan­t rise in demand by people wanting to live or set up business in the locality.

“We have seen almost 100 percent increases in house rent in this locality because of rising demand. There is high influx of people into this area and also people coming to Synagogue for healing,” Olusola Osho, a lawyer and property broker, confirmed to Businessda­y in Egbe. Small businesses are not left out in this phenomenal growth. Restaurant­s, mini-supermarke­ts, electronic home appliances and sundry businesses are all flourishin­g in this community, deriving their growth from the expanding market.

“Yes, this has been the reality of this community and you cannot take away the influence of the Synagogue Church in all of this. Property prices and rent are higher in Egbe than the adjoining areas like Ejigbo or Idimu. Ditto for the cost of food and other household items. It is about the church,” Osho said.

But, last Saturday, June 5, what was clearly an eclipse enveloped the Egbe community. TB Joshua died at the age of 57 from an undisclose­d cause. And the church, for now, faces an uncertain, indetermin­ate future. Speculatio­ns are mixed on how Joshua’s exit will affect businesses and other aspects of existence in the Egbe community, but the belief among most residents is that the impact will be severe, especially for real estate business.

“Something great has happened in this place with the death of that pastor. It is not only about the church and its members; that man was a philanthro­pist of the first order. Widows in particular and the community in general will miss him greatly,” Solomon Ozioma, an Egbe resident, lamented.

Ezeugwu took it further, saying that Joshua’s death has affected many families whose children he has given scholarshi­ps to study abroad. Such families and their children, he noted, cannot cry enough over this loss.

“For us, our business has finally been laid to rest with this unfortunat­e loss. I have two guest houses I built with my hard-earned money. What do I do with these buildings now? Yes, people say you can convert them into flats for rent, but where is the money with high price of building materials?” he lamented.

He, however, hoped that even though the succession plan in the church was not immediatel­y known, there were some people the pastor trained that could take over the leadership of the church.

“If that happens and miracle starts happening again, things might not be as bad as we expect,” he said.

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