Chief Michael Udegbi Ogaranya Holy Cross Repack Now

“Repack,” he says—more instruction than ritual. “Not to hide, but to hold.” He unravels each item and sets them like offerings on a low table: pepper-smeared prayer beads, a tattered school badge, a letter folded till its edges are soft. With steady hands he mends what can be mended, ties what must be kept together, and breathes a blessing that is half prayer, half recipe. Around him, the elders hum an old hymn, and young ones tape the torn edges of memory with new thread—bright, stubborn, hopeful.

Chief Michael Udegbi Ogaranya — Holy Cross Repack chief michael udegbi ogaranya holy cross repack

When the lanterns die to ash and the moon rides high, the Holy Cross Repack is lifted onto a young shoulder and carried down the path to the chapel by the crossroads. There, beneath the simple wood cross, the bundle is placed on the altar not as a relic of what once was, but as a seed for what will be. Chief Michael steps back, eyes reflecting candlelight and the gleam of future days. “Keep it,” he says softly. “But change it when it needs changing.” “Repack,” he says—more instruction than ritual

He speaks first of roots—of ancestors who planted their faith alongside cassava, who braided prayer into work and song into sorrow. Then of journeys—of youths who left with bright shoes and empty pockets, returning with stranger tongues and hands that remembered how to mend. Ogaranya’s voice knits the two: a litany, a laugh, a dare. He opens an old wooden chest, its ironwork pitted from rain, and pulls out a bundle wrapped in faded cloth. Inside, relics: a brass rosary dulled by decades of palms, a child's embroidered scapular, a chipped chalice with a hairline crack like a river. Around him, the elders hum an old hymn,