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THEY’D NEVER heard of Saskatoon in their native
Nigeria, but 49 year old Bisi Peluola and her husband Akin felt peace about
moving there.
“Our friends thought we were crazy,” says
Bisi. “They thought we’d be living in igloos.”
Nevertheless, in 1998 Bisi and Akin – then
living in England – resigned their jobs and moved to
Saskatchewan’s capital, trusting God would provide for them.
Today Akin, who was a certified psychiatrist in
England, works with mentally disordered offenders at the Regional
Psychiatric Centre. Bisi, meanwhile, runs three pharmacies. She has also
just opened a new store specializing in ethnic foods.
Both consider their jobs to be more than a source of
income. Says Akin, who works with sex offenders, schizophrenics and
severely violent personalities, “I pray with them and make them see
there is hope.”
In the same way Bisi views her drugstores as
‘miracles.’ With all three of her pharmacies located on 20th
Street – Saskatoon’s ‘hood’ – Bisi spends her
days ministering to drug addicts and prostitutes who are drawn to her for
the hope she gives them.
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“I go in there every day and see people
languishing and perishing,” says the mother of three. “When you
have the heart of God, you want to help.”
Bisi’s ministry is successful because she
refuses to preach. Instead, she does what few others dare to: “No one
wants a drug addict to work for them, but I give them those chances.”
She pays them for doing manual tasks like cleaning or stacking.
“When you show them that you care, then
they’re willing to believe what you want to tell them.”
A former cocaine addict is one of many who feel
indebted to Bisi for believing in them. “He keeps coming into my
store and thanking me for giving him the opportunity to change, to believe
in God. He says, ‘Now I have a peace that I never thought I’d
have.’”
While some might think owning three pharmacies is more
than enough, Bisi does not. Hence, the new store in January which will
offer affordable ethnic foods.
“I see every store opportunity as an opportunity
to minister, to show the light of God,” she says. “It cost God
his only begotten Son. It may cost us money, or our time, but if you want
to see the work of God being done, you need to do what he wants you to
do.”
Winter/Spring 2008
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