
Olatunji
Okunsanya, the son of MIC boss, Tunji, who died along with his father,
in plane crash on Thursday tells KEMI LAWAL, why he chose funeral
business
Can you tell us about yourself?
My name is Olatunji Okunsanya and I work
for MIC. I also run LPS, a funeral consultancy service provider. It is
a personal role I have decided to take up and a summary of being an
ambassador for the dead. I have a father and a mother who are
hardworking. I am the second child of the family and I have an elder
sister who is a celebrated makeup artist.
What does it mean to be an ambassador for the dead?
In every institution that we have ,
everything is properly taken care of but nobody talks about the dead and
they have issues ranging from the laws governing them, burial spaces
and so much more. What we do is we speak with people and we have been
able to build a relationship with the federal and state governments plus
private institutions to take good care of the dead. A dead person has a
right to be visited by its family 50 years after if the burial space is
intact. A dead person has a right to a decent burial. So, we liaise and
give practical solutions.
You read banking and finance, what are you doing with funeral services?
The fact remains that I was born into
this business. My grandfather started MIC in 1946 and my father at some
point created something out of it. He was able to take the business to
greater heights. Therefore, it has been a thorough foundation for me. It
is just what I have done from primary school through secondary school
and then to the university. When I was much younger, my friends used to
say I used to open the newspapers from the back to read about
obituaries.
So even at a very young age, you were not scared of caskets?
I cannot be scared because this is what I
have seen all my life. I was literally born in the midst of caskets and
my nuclear family has not done anything apart from caskets. What does
not talk does not have control over you.
Why did you not study to be a mortician instead of getting a finance degree?
I have a diploma in psychology, a degree
in banking and finance and I have so many international affiliations
with funeral consultancy services. That background was necessary to have
a vast idea of what is going on and not just you being limited. I did
that to learn a little more outside the jurisdiction of what I do.
In the process of doing your job, do you betray emotions?
Yes. Primarily the funeral director is a
human being. The bible talks about the fact that it is good to go to
where they mourn. When you go to places like that, you are reminded
about the fact that life ends one day. It helps you to move closer to
God. For the funeral director, everyday of his life is about people
mourning and that is tougher. You get emotional but you do not betray
emotions.
Are there times you feel like opting out of the business?
At no point in time can I opt out. It is
all about a personal advancement and revolutionising the industry. My
job is not a funny or strange one because someone has to do the job.
Have you had any queer experience in the course of doing your job?
First, I am a Christian. I have my faith
in God and it is unshaken. He has given us power to tread paths that
people fear. So, such superstitions do not come to play in my life. My
faith tells me that what cannot talk has no control over me so if
someone dies and you wrap up the person, I did not kill the person. I
was only contracted to give the person a befitting burial so there is
nothing to fear.
Do you get funny reactions when you tell people what you do?
I offered to meet up with you(the
reporter) somewhere else because I was worried you might not be
comfortable talking to me in the midst of caskets. I hear all sorts: ‘If
you were the only man left, you will not marry my daughter.’ Some do
not even want to give you a handshake because they believe you have
ulterior motives. If they think deeply, they would realise that we
actually run an institution that should be celebrated. Death is the only
constant thing. The only constant thing they would put after
everybody’s name learned or not is RIP. Therefore, if someone has taken
the bold step to take care of the only constant thing in life, we should
be given some credit.
When marriage comes eventually, I do not
think my prospective in-laws should worry about what I do, what they
should worry about is if I can take care of their daughter. How I make
my money should not be an issue.
Did your father insist you toe this line?
At no point did he insist and until
tomorrow, he does not. That will also help me with my children because I
will give them the best of everything and they will have the
opportunity to decide what they want to be in life. It is not compulsory
they take after me or their grandfather or great grandfather.
Are there any highpoints in this profession?
Yes, there are because you would realise
that a lot of people look forward to meeting you. I have had
opportunities of meeting people because I have provided this essential
services for them. We do not have to knock their doors to get their
audience.
You are wearing black now; does it have anything to do with your job?
Not exactly. Maybe it is because I am
used to it or we deal with many people that mourn. If I wear a yellow
shirt or tie to where people are mourning, I will look out of place. I
am not always in black; I wear white, grey and other colours. I feel
very comfortable in my native attire and I wear loads of them.
How do you relax when you are not working?
Because I have a lot doing as an
ambassador of the dead, I do not have time to relax. I am always in the
middle of a new challenge.
Are you under pressure to outdo your father?
You cannot outdo a man that is still on
his feet, energetic, fit, a pacesetter and enjoys what he does. The
pressure instead is to be a success story. He has been able to transform
an industry from something to everything. I cannot even step into my
father’s shoes because they are too wide. When your hobby is your work,
nobody can come close to you.
I have been to morgues and there are no
escorts or sirens there, there is no posing in the morgue, there are no
celebrities there. You put people under six feet and you realise that
the cars and the houses do not fit in. I have come to understand that
when people die, nobody has jumped into the vault and said bury me
along. So, it makes me see things differently. At the end of the day,
when they say everything is vanity, I am in a better position to talk
about it because I have seen it all.
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