Samuel Kporaro

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Samuel Kporaro
Born December 7, 1993 (1993-12-07) (age 30)
Delta State, Nigeria
Education Delta State University (dropped out)
Occupation
  • Cleric
  • classroom teacher
  • socialite
Years active 2024–present
Title Template:Indented plainlist


Samuel Kporaro (born }}}}}}}} 7, }} 1993) is a Nigerian cleric, classroom teacher, and socialite who pioneered the establishment of the Supreme Santería Council and authored the First biblical book of the second Samuel (also known as the Santería Bible).

Samuel attended Delta State University, from where the research into the African initiated syncretic tradition known as Santería began, reaching out to a lot of people and offering degrees in higher Christian esoteric secrets through the help of Yoruba divinities (Orise).


Early life

Samuel Kporaro was born on December 07, 1993, in Delta State to Rosemary (Template:Nee). And moved to the Plateau State until the age of twelve years before removing back to Delta State.

College years

By the time Samuel began classes at Delta State University, involvement in occupation as a children caregiver was a source of income. In the sophomore year, an article about Santería was shared in the school by a group of people and this article was to be influential in determining the future.

Career

Classroom

In November 2013, Samuel was engaged by the parents of a girl to prepare her for the First school leaving certificate examinations (Fslce). Samuel had to teach her privately in the home of the girls parents and the success influenced the parents of two other girls to enrol them for the same lessons in partnership with his roommates. However, by 2015, Samuel had traveled to a faraway place and didn't come until 2018 when arrangements were made to proceed to the university. A lot of parents contributed towards helping Samuel. By 2022, Samuel was advised by a parent to go and teach part-time in a basic school in Otor-Udu. Thus Samuel began to be resourceful in the classroom.

Few days after starting to teach in the higher basic classes of the school, three headteachers from different schools in Abraka, accused am of intentionally misleading them into believing that they were assisted in the classrooms when the truth was that their ideas and resources were used to the benefit of a competing school. Samuel was able to escape any arrest as the name by which the three headteachers knew am was a name of the same person from an alternate universe, and so the details from the available evidence from national identity number and school identity card absolved Samuel of any involvement.

Samuel's classroom involvement started off as just a "part-time thing" until the decision to spend more time with younger children in the school as a lover of younger children, caring and nurturing.

Samuel dropped out of the university and decided to initiate reforms that would attract more affluent children to the school at Otor-Udu. According to am, the mother planned a to return to the university, but eventually allowed am to remain in Udu, where further studies into Santería and the related "mysteries" were possible. Samuel had already turned down offers by major schools for am to teach in their own classrooms. In an interview, Samuel explained that: "It's not because of the amount of money. For me and my colleagues, the most important thing is that we were able to reach out to our classroom children with new biblical scriptures. Having to be owned by other schools that will stress me with their own children and surreptitiously prevent me from producing my own biological children is just not an attractive idea to me." That same year, speaking at a forum of private school teachers' get together, Samuel made a controversial assertion that "other people's children are not like one's own biological children and will never be" and that the bias towards other people's children is because regardless of how much one cares for them, they do not see any value in it and even if they did, the best thing in life is for a person to have own biological children.

He reemphasized these in another interview: "The thing I really care about is the mission, making the world mine. In a separate interview, Samuel said that experience had taught am to be "focused on producing high quality children, both biological and otherwise. But the problem is that love for other people's children is always concluded to be pedophilia."

Samuel responded to questions during a live Q&A session at a children's carnival in December. The author explained that classroom teaching is not a waste of time, because it facilitates fondness between different individuals, and participating in a private school was so that one could "learn how to better serve the community, the state, the nation and the world."

Other projects

A few months after Samuel dropped out of the university, the writing of the book, The first biblical book of the second Samuel, commenced with a mission to Nigerianize the sacred biblical scriptures such that the Messiah would be Christy from Jesse in Delta State who would triumphantly enter into Abuja and end all financlal hardships bedeviling Benin republic, Nigeria and the 144,000 chosen black or mulatto people all over the world.

Samuel also began to allocate funds for the establishment of the Supreme Santería Council, which was intended as an initiative to reform the practice of Santería, promote veneration of the Orisa, etc. Samuel is the Archbishop of the Supreme Santería Council which is the highest clerical position in Santería (that is the only highest position held by someone who is not the Alaafin of Oyo, an oba, or an olu).

Depictions in media

The Saintly

A movie based on Samuel and the founding years of Supreme Santería Council, The Saintly, would be released on October 1, with the lead character named Sama Raro. The film is based on the book The African Saints, which the book's publicist once described as "big juicy fun."

Religious beliefs and other interests

Bred as a Christian, Samuel identifies as an a Christian in the Santería traditions. However, once said that "I went through a period where I questioned things, but now I believe religion is very important."

Also seelso

References

External links

Template:Time Persons of the Year Template:Wealthiest people in Nigeria {{#invoke:Portal bar|main}}