Fr Arazu fervently believed that a priest was, ipso facto, a servant of the people, and not just of God, Anambra govt says
Anambra State government says it receives the news of Reverend Father Raymond Chukwunyerugwa’s death with sadness.
A statement by C. Don Adinuba, Commissioner for Information & Public Enlightenment, Anambra State, says the people and government of Anambra State received with sadness the news of the death of Reverend Father Raymond Chukwunyerugwu Arazu, C.s.Sp, on December 26, 2021, following a battle with prostrate cancer and diabetes.
Born in 1939, Fr Arazu hailed from Ihembosi in Ekwusigo Local Government Area.
According to the statement, Arazu was not just a good priest, but an amazing gift to Anambra State, ndi Igbo and the world of scholarship. After studies in Nigeria, Italy and the United Kingdom where he excelled in academics and sports, Fr Arazu embarked on a lifelong campaign for African cultural Renaissance through psalm translation, music, scholarship and herbal medicine.
“He translated the psalms in the Holy Bible into Igbo and set them to music played entirely with African instruments like ubo, or thumb piano”, the Anambra State Commissioner for Information and Public Enlightenment, C. Don Adinuba, stated in a statement in Awka today.
“At a time when many educated Africans considered it infra dig to speak any African language”, Adinuba observed, “Fr Arazu, who received a doctorate in moral science in Italy with distinction and emerged the best student at the University of Southampton in England, started wholesome African cultural revival.
“He was the first researcher to establish that the language of divination in Igbo and Bini is exactly the same.
“He began a scientific study of African plants and herbs and their curative properties which led to his establishment of centres of herbal medicine in Enugu and Awka, with the Anambra State government appointing him chairman of the state’s traditional medicine board.
“There are thousands of people in different parts of Nigeria who have over the decades depended entirely on his medicines, regardless of their faiths, because they believe passionately in their efficaciousss,” the statement reads.
This Spiritan priest led his life entirely for society. While in the service of the old Anambra State Ministry of Youth Development and Social Services in Enugu, he had farms in places like Abakaliki in Ebonyi State where he was constantly tilling the soil with hoes and cutting plants with cutlasses, alongside his workers. The produce was either sold or used to feed the numerous indigent people he was training without making a show of it in public.
Fr Arazu fervently believed that a priest was, ipso facto, a servant of the people, and not just of God. He drew inspiration from the life of the great Father (later Bishop) Michael Eneja who, as parish priest of the church at Fegge, Onitsha, would personally carry a bucket of water on his head to serve mere deacons and seminarians, despite living with aides who could perform this duty. Arazu saw in Eneja a perfect example of what was later to be known across the globe as a servant leader, and strove to be like him in holiness and humility.
An engaging scholar who wrote numerous research articles and books on various subjects, Fr Arazu spoke six international languages fluently. His research work on the place of kabbalah in ancient Jewish mystic tradition and work on comparative religious systems which include oriental religious, have drawn global attention. Still, he was at home with his kinfolk. When his rural Ihembosi community was in crisis, he accepted to lead the town union and quickly brought peace and olstanility to the place.
May the Lord accept the soul of this dedicated servant of the people and a hero of African Renaissance who led a life of poverty, chastity, humility, service to society and solidarity.