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Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal - Crime - Nairaland

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Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by UnbrokenChords: 1:32pm On Jul 01, 2017
When Terry Gobanga - then Terry Apudo - didn't show up to her wedding, nobody could have guessed that she had been abducted, raped and left for dead by the roadside. It was the first of two tragedies to hit the young Nairobi pastor in quick succession. But she is a survivor.

It was going to be a very big wedding. I was a pastor, so all our church members were coming, as well as all our relatives. My fiance, Harry, and I were very excited - we were getting married in All Saints Cathedral in Nairobi and I had rented a beautiful dress.

But the night before the wedding I realised that I had some of Harry's clothes, including his cravat. He couldn't show up without a tie, so a friend who had stayed the night offered to take it to him first thing in the morning. We got up at dawn and I walked her to the bus station.

As I was making my way back home, I walked past a guy sitting on the bonnet of a car - suddenly he grabbed me from behind and dumped me in the back seat. There were two more men inside, and they drove off. It all happened in a fraction of a second.

A piece of cloth was stuffed in my mouth. I was kicking and hitting out and trying to scream. When I managed to push the gag out, I screamed: "It's my wedding day!" That was when I got the first blow. One of the men told me to "co-operate or you will die".

The men took turns to rape me. I felt sure I was going to die, but I was still fighting for my life, so when one of the men took the gag out of my mouth I bit his manhood. He screamed in pain and one of them stabbed me in the stomach. Then they opened the door and threw me out of the moving car.

I was miles from home, outside Nairobi. More than six hours had passed since I had been abducted.

A child saw me being thrown out and called her grandmother. People came running. When the police came they tried to get a pulse, but no-one could. Thinking I was dead, they wrapped me in a blanket and started to take me to the mortuary. But on the way there, I choked on the blanket and coughed. The policeman said: "She's alive?" And he turned the car around and drove me to the biggest government hospital in Kenya.

I arrived in great shock, murmuring incoherently. I was half-naked and covered in blood, and my face was swollen from being punched. But something must have alerted the matron, because she guessed I was a bride. "Let's go around the churches to see if they're missing a bride," she told the nurses.

By coincidence, the first church they called at was All Saints Cathedral. "Are you missing a bride?" the nurse asked.

The minister said: "Yes, there was a wedding at 10 o'clock and she didn't come."

When I didn't show up to the church, my parents were panicking. People were sent out to search for me. Rumours flew. Some wondered: "Did she change her mind?" Others said: "No, it's so unlike her, what happened?"

After a few hours, they had to take down the decorations to make room for the next ceremony. Harry had been put in the vestry to wait.

When they heard where I was, my parents came to the hospital with the whole entourage. Harry was actually carrying my wedding gown. But the media had also got wind of the story so there were reporters too.

I was moved to another hospital where I'd have more privacy. That was where the doctors stitched me up and gave me some devastating news: "The stab wound went deep into your womb, so you won't be able to carry any children."

I was given the morning-after pill, as well as antiretroviral drugs to protect me from HIV and Aids. My mind shut down, it refused to accept what had happened.

Harry kept saying he still wanted to marry me. "I want to take care of her and make sure she comes back to good health in my arms, in our house," he said. Truth be told, I wasn't in a position to say Yes or No because my mind was so jammed with the faces of the three men, and with everything that had happened.

A few days later, when I was less sedated, I was able to look him in the eye. I kept saying sorry. I felt like I had let him down. Some people said it was my own fault for leaving the house in the morning. It was really hurtful, but my family and Harry supported me.

The police never caught the rapists. I went to line-up after line-up but I didn't recognise any of the men, and it hurt me each time I went. It set back my recovery - it was 10 steps forward, 20 back. In the end I went back to the police station and said: "You know what, I'm done. I just want to leave it."

Three months after the attack I was told I was HIV-negative and got really excited, but they told me I had to wait three more months to be sure. Still, Harry and I began to plan our second wedding.

Although I had been very angry at the press intrusion, somebody read my story and asked to meet me. Her name was Vip Ogolla, and she was also a rape survivor. We spoke, and she told me she and her friends wanted to give me a free wedding. "Go wild, have whatever you want," she said.

I was ecstatic. I went for a different type of cake, much more expensive. Instead of a rented gown, now I could have one that was totally mine.

In July 2005, seven months after our first planned wedding, Harry and I got married and went on a honeymoon.

Twenty-nine days later, we were at home on a very cold night. Harry lit a charcoal burner and took it to the bedroom. After dinner, he removed it because the room was really warm. I got under the covers as he locked up the house. When he came to bed he said he was feeling dizzy, but we thought nothing of it.

It was so cold we couldn't sleep, so I suggested getting another duvet. But Harry said he couldn't get it as he didn't have enough strength. Strangely, I couldn't stand up either. We realised something was very wrong. He passed out. I passed out. I remember coming to. I would call him. At times he would respond, at other times he wouldn't. I pushed myself out of bed and threw up, which gave me some strength. I started crawling to the phone. I called my neighbour and said: "Something is wrong, Harry is not responding."

She came over immediately but it took me ages to crawl to the front door to let her in as I kept passing out. I saw an avalanche of people coming in, screaming. And I passed out again.

I woke up in hospital and asked where my husband was. They said they were working on him in the next room. I said: "I'm a pastor, I've seen quite a lot in my life, I need you to be very straight with me." The doctor looked at me and said: "I'm sorry, your husband did not make it."

I couldn't believe it.

Going back to church for the funeral was terrible. Just a month earlier I had been there in my white dress, with Harry standing at the front looking handsome in his suit. Now, I was in black and he was being wheeled in, in a casket.

People thought I was cursed and held back their children from me. "There's a bad omen hanging over her," they said. At one point, I actually believed it myself.

Others accused me of killing my husband. That really got me down - I was grieving.

The post-mortem showed what really happened: as the carbon monoxide filled his system, he started choking and suffocated.

I had a terrible breakdown. I felt let down by God, I felt let down by everybody. I couldn't believe that people could be laughing, going out and just going about life. I crashed.

One day I was sitting on the balcony looking at the birds chirping away and I said: "God, how can you take care of the birds and not me?" In that instant I remembered there are 24 hours a day - sitting in depression with your curtains closed, no-one's going to give you back those 24 hours. Before you know, it's a week, a month, a year wasted away. That was a tough reality.

I told everybody I would never ever get married again. God took my husband, and the thought of ever going through such a loss again was too much. It's something I wouldn't wish on anybody. The pain is so intense, you feel it in your nails.

But there was one man - Tonny Gobanga - who kept visiting. He would encourage me to talk about my husband and think about the good times. One time he didn't call for three days and I was so angry. That's when it hit me that I had fallen for him.
Tonny proposed marriage but I told him to buy a magazine, read my story and tell me if he still loved me. He came back and said he still wanted to marry me.

But I said: "Listen, there's another thing - I can't have children, so I cannot get married to you."

"Children are a gift from God," he said. "If we get them, Amen. If not, I will have more time to love you."

I thought: "Wow, what a line!" So I said Yes.

Tonny went home to tell his parents, who were very excited, until they heard my story. "You can't marry her - she is cursed," they said. My father-in-law refused to attend the wedding, but we went ahead anyway. We had 800 guests - many came out of curiosity.

It was three years after my first wedding, and I was very scared. When we were exchanging vows, I thought: "Here I am again Father, please don't let him die." As the congregation prayed for us I cried uncontrollably.

A year into our marriage, I felt unwell and went to the doctor - and to my great surprise he told me that I was pregnant.

As the months progressed I was put on total bed rest, because of the stab wound to my womb. But all went well, and we had a baby girl who we called Tehille. Four years later, we had another baby girl named Towdah.


Today, I am the best of friends with my father-in-law.

I wrote a book, Crawling out of Darkness, about my ordeal, to give people hope of rising again. I also started an organisation called Kara Olmurani. We work with rape survivors, as I call them - not rape victims. We offer counselling and support. We are looking to start a halfway house for them where they can come and find their footing before going back to face the world.

I have forgiven my attackers. It wasn't easy but I realised I was getting a raw deal by being upset with people who probably don't care. My faith also encourages me to forgive and not repay evil with evil but with good.

The most important thing is to mourn. Go through every step of it. Get upset until you are willing to do something about your situation. You have to keep moving, crawl if you have to. But move towards your destiny because it's waiting, and you have to go and get it.

https://www.google.com.ng/amp/www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/39795047

70 Likes 14 Shares

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by olatola00(m): 1:38pm On Jul 01, 2017
Awful.. Some people are just heartless

38 Likes 1 Share

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Ehinmola(m): 3:08pm On Jul 01, 2017
UnbrokenChords:
Terry Gobanga a young Nairobi pastor in an interview with BBC, talks on her life, how she was abducted and gang-raped on her wedding day and left for dead. The bitter blows life has dealt her, God’s invention in her life and becoming a Survivor.

Her story;



It was going to be a very big wedding. I was a pastor, so all our church members were coming, as well as all our relatives. My fiancee, Harry, and I were very excited – we were g etting married in All Saints Cathedral in Nairobi and I had rented a beautiful dress.

But the night before the wedding I realised that I had some of Harry’s clothes, including his cravat. He couldn’t show up without a tie, so a friend who had stayed the night offered to take it to him first thing in the morning. We got up at dawn and I walked her to the bus station.

As I was making my way back home, I walked past a guy sitting on the bonnet of a car – suddenly he grabbed me from behind and dumped me in the back seat. There were two more men inside, and they drove off. It all happened in a fraction of a second.

A piece of cloth was stuffed in my mouth. I was kicking and hitting out and trying to scream. When I managed to push the gag out, I screamed: “It’s my wedding day!” That was when I got the first blow. One of the men told me to “co-operate or you will die”.

The men took turns to rape me. I felt sure I was going to die, but I was still fighting for my life, so when one of the men took the gag out of my mouth I bit his manhood. He screamed in pain and one of them stabbed me in the stomach. Then they opened the door and threw me out of the moving car.

I was miles from home, outside Nairobi. More than six hours had passed since I had been abducted.

A child saw me being thrown out and called her grandmother. People came running. When the police came they tried to get a pulse, but no-one could. Thinking I was dead, they wrapped me in a blanket and started to take me to the mortuary. But on the way there, I choked on the blanket and coughed. The policeman said: “She’s alive?” And he turned the car around and drove me to the biggest government hospital in Kenya.

I arrived in great shock, murmuring incoherently. I was half-naked and covered in blood, and my face was swollen from being punched. But something must have alerted the matron, because she guessed I was a bride. “Let’s go around the churches to see if they’re missing a bride,” she told the nurses.

By coincidence, the first church they called at was All Saints Cathedral. “Are you missing a bride?” the nurse asked.

The minister said: “Yes, there was a wedding at 10 o’clock and she didn’t come.”

When I didn’t show up to the church, my parents were panicking. People were sent out to search for me. Rumours flew. Some wondered: “Did she change her mind?” Others said: “No, it’s so unlike her, what happened?”

After a few hours, they had to take down the decorations to make room for the next ceremony. Harry had been put in the vestry to wait.

When they heard where I was, my parents came to the hospital with the whole entourage. Harry was actually carrying my wedding gown. But the media had also got wind of the story so there were reporters too.

I was moved to another hospital where I’d have more privacy. That was where the doctors stitched me up and gave me some devastating news: “The stab wound went deep into your womb, so you won’t be able to carry any children.”

I was given the morning-after pill, as well as antiretroviral drugs to protect me from HIV and AIDS. My mind shut down, it refused to accept what had happened.

Harry kept saying he still wanted to marry me. “I want to take care of her and make sure she comes back to good health in my arms, in our house,” he said. Truth be told, I wasn’t in a position to say Yes or No because my mind was so jammed with the faces of the three men, and with everything that had happened.

A few days later, when I was less sedated, I was able to look him in the eye. I kept saying sorry. I felt like I had let him down. Some people said it was my own fault for leaving the house in the morning. It was really hurtful, but my family and Harry supported me.

The police never caught the rapists. I went to line-up after line-up but I didn’t recognise any of the men, and it hurt me each time I went. It set back my recovery – it was Ten steps forward, Twenty back. In the end I went back to the police station and said: “You know what, I’m done. I just want to leave it.”

Three months after the attack I was told I was HIV-negative and got really excited, but they told me I had to wait three more months to be sure. Still, Harry and I began to plan our second wedding.

Although I had been very angry at the press intrusion, somebody read my story and asked to meet me. Her name was Vip Ogolla, and she was also a rape survivor. We spoke, and she told me she and her friends wanted to give me a free wedding. “Go wild, have whatever you want,” she said.

I was ecstatic. I went for a different type of cake, much more expensive. Instead of a rented gown, now I could have one that was totally mine.

In July 2005, seven months after our first planned wedding, Harry and I got married and went on a honeymoon.

( Interview by BBC )



Read concluding part here HERE

Photo-credit; BBC
. Thanks be to God the creator. You lived to give this testimony is by HIS Grace. Therefore let other victims cast their problems unto Almighty God, HE will see them through. For the rapist, dont doubt, God will judge them.

42 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Nobody: 3:15pm On Jul 01, 2017
I just read the story elsewhere....and man was I inspired.

Lalasticlala, Mynd44, Seun.....Front Page Please!

9 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by teewai3(m): 7:37pm On Jul 01, 2017
Hmmmm

1 Like

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Chiefpriest1(m): 7:38pm On Jul 01, 2017
Hmm! Some eyes have seen things. Na who talk him own dem dey know.

Sometimes , you just have to say "thank you God", for nothing.

What? Almost shed a tear there!

47 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by tobtap: 7:38pm On Jul 01, 2017
KENYA na very weird nation... kpele pastor.....

8 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by GeneralOjukwu: 7:39pm On Jul 01, 2017
Rape is an experience which is often traumatic all through the life of a woman.

#SayNoToRape# Vaseline is fairly cheap.

31 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by EddieCAD(m): 7:39pm On Jul 01, 2017
Kenya with sex news undecided

1 Like

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by auntysimbiat(f): 7:39pm On Jul 01, 2017
OK
Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Nobody: 7:39pm On Jul 01, 2017
I think they should invite Hercules Poirot on the Rape and Murder aspect of the story,looks fishy.

Anyways,Congratulations,God is still up there

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by elfico(m): 7:40pm On Jul 01, 2017
Ehinmola:
. Thanks be to God the creator. You lived to give this testimony is by HIS Grace. Therefore let other victims cast their problems unto Almighty God, HE will see them through. For the rapist, dont doubt, God will judge them.
you had to quote the entire article abi?

61 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Politicalapathy: 7:40pm On Jul 01, 2017
so what should we do now
Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Phi001(m): 7:41pm On Jul 01, 2017
Please, can somebody summarize that epistle for we the lazy ones?

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by simplemach(m): 7:42pm On Jul 01, 2017
Am I supposed to read that epistle?
It should have been shared into episodes

3 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by LaDolceVida(f): 7:42pm On Jul 01, 2017
Ehinmola:
. Thanks be to God the creator. You lived to give this testimony is by HIS Grace. Therefore let other victims cast their problems unto Almighty God, HE will see them through. For the rapist, dont doubt, God will judge them.
And you had to quote everything

28 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by MadCow1: 7:42pm On Jul 01, 2017
Shit
Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Nobody: 7:44pm On Jul 01, 2017
Psalm 119

75% of posters will not read this.

2 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Ishilove: 7:44pm On Jul 01, 2017
Christ, what a horrible story. My God! sad

1 Like

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by cococandy(f): 7:45pm On Jul 01, 2017
Wow cry
Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by bZoMa(m): 7:45pm On Jul 01, 2017
Only in Kenya shocked
Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by 1zynnvn(m): 7:45pm On Jul 01, 2017
Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by miki1(m): 7:46pm On Jul 01, 2017
Victory belongs to Jesus; victory belongs to him! - Todd dulaney

5 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by addictedwriter(m): 7:46pm On Jul 01, 2017
Life is a mystery, those living in it are mysterious, while the God we serve is ever gracious.One thing I have learnt in life is never give up on your today else....your tomorrow ll never forgive you. What a strong woman!!!...

8 Likes

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by EddieCAD(m): 7:46pm On Jul 01, 2017
Politicalapathy:
so what should we do now

Drink champagne

1 Like 2 Shares

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by burkingx(f): 7:46pm On Jul 01, 2017
Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by cococandy(f): 7:47pm On Jul 01, 2017
Some people said it was my own fault for leaving the house in the morning. It was really hurtful.


As expected.
Did they also ask what she was wearing that made her attract the rapists?

15 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Nobody: 7:47pm On Jul 01, 2017
MadCow1:
Shit

? Seriously?
Re: Kenyan Pastor Who Was Gang-Raped On Her Wedding Day Recounts Her Ordeal by Nobody: 7:48pm On Jul 01, 2017
simplemach:
Am I supposed to read that epistle?
It should have been shared into episodes

Just read....and be inspired.

3 Likes

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