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I admire my parents’ legacy, but it was never uniform to wear — Tolu Odukoya

For Tolu Odukoya, growing up with one of Nigeria’s most celebrated ministry names has never meant growing into it.

The daughter of the late Pastor Bimbo Odukoya and Pastor Taiwo Odukoya spoke with rare candour during a recent appearance on the *Dear Ife* series, pushing back against the widespread expectation that she simply step into her parents’ towering legacy.

When host Ife posed the question that has arguably trailed her entire life — what it feels like to fill such big shoes — Tolu’s answer was immediate and unambiguous.

“So I first say that those shoes, my feet are not inside,” she said. “The shoes are admired. Thank God for the legacy.”

To her, the Odukoya legacy is not a uniform to wear daily but a masterpiece to admire — one she respects precisely by not attempting to replicate it.

Yet she is clear-eyed about the privileges that foundation affords, and the weight that comes with it. Inheriting excellence, she explained, strips away the comfort of excuses.

“If you now come and put one rug on it and the rug is dirty, it’s on you,” she said, acknowledging that a solid foundation raises the stakes rather than lowering them.

The burden, she adds, sits heaviest not in her ministerial role but in the quieter office of firstborn daughter — one she confesses she never sought.

“The office has so much responsibility and I did not want it,” she admitted.

There is a particular irony in her story. She is the daughter of Pastor Bimbo Odukoya, who was the global face of confidence and self-assurance for a generation of Nigerian women, yet Tolu still wrestles with the deeply human question of feeling enough — and doing so under public scrutiny.

She traces much of her inner resolve to what she describes as a spiritual deposit made before her birth, recalling how her mother would place her hand on her stomach during pregnancy and declare her daughter’s destiny aloud.

“She’ll put her hand on her stomach and say: ‘This one is going to sing. This one is going to sing,'” Tolu recounted, adding, “I realised that she was laying a demand on what she believed was in there.”

For Tolu Odukoya, the journey is not about retracing old footsteps but about the quiet courage to stand beside them — honouring a storied past while walking a path that is entirely her own.

LUKMAN ABDULMALIK

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