58-year-old Mzee
Selemia Ayeko Wandago from Likoni, Mombasa County, Kenya married Phyllis Okisa, 64, a
woman he had been secretly admiring close to four decades.
Ayeko says they knew each other decades ago when Okisa regularly came
visiting her sister, who was married to the former’s uncle. The two
love birds confessed that at some point they got attracted to each other,
but could not date for fear of stigma associated with relative (however
distant) who fall in love.
"We knew one another when we were both young. We liked each other, but we were never romantically involved," says Okisa.
In 1969, months after they met, the then 17-year-old Okisa
got married. His wife gave birth to a baby boy who died a year later. Ayeko, on the other
hand, got married and even had a family.
"I developed complications during my second pregnancy while in my
20’s. Things got bad and my uterus had to be removed due ectopic
pregnancy related complications," says Okisa whose fate was later sealed
after her then husband’s relatives got him a second wife whom she
couldn’t get along with, leading to a nasty separation.
Decades later the two found
themselves living in the same neighborhood at Maweni in Likoni, with
Okisa making regular visits as a relative.
"She (okisa) used to regularly visit and we continued to refer and
treat each other as shemeji. My second wife was very kind and welcoming
and always welcomed Okisa in our home and treated her like the relative
she was," says Ayeko who confesses that much as he still was attracted
to Okisa, he suppressed the affection without knowing that the feeling
was mutual.
When Ayeko’s second wife died in 2011, while
giving birth due to high blood
pressure, he had nobody to take care of him and his young children other than
Okisa, whom he insists they still had not had any romantic involvement
whatsoever at that point.
"She would come, wash clothes and cook for me and return to her home.
I will never forget 2015 when my hand hurt with mdudu (a painful
infection on fingers common at the Coast). No neighbour came to assist
me and the three small children but her,"
He says he was touched when she told him she would continue
taking care of him and the kids even after his hand healed. I told her
to come and live with me so that she she would take care
of the children since she was chased away by her husband for lack of
children."
"I had given up on finding love. Ayeko is a blessing to me, says
Okisa, a vendor who originally hailed from Luanda in Vihiga County. The
two love birds got married at Christ Evangelical Church in Shimanzi with
the blessings of Bishop John Oketch Olwande who presided over their
nuptials in May 1 2016.
"I love my husband since he does not drink
alcohol." Ayeko says he intends to take Okisa to meet his relatives now that they are now husband and wife.
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