By Mfonobong Nseh
Nigeria's Richest Woman Folorunsho Alakija Reveals She Did Not Go
To University
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Nigeria’s wealthiest woman, Folorunsho Alakija, has disclosed that she
did not attend a University, insisting that a formal education is not a
requisite for success in life.
Alakija, who is worth $2.6 billion by FORBES estimates, reportedly made
the disclosure on Thursday, while addressing students at the University of
Lagos during a ceremony to mark the 2014 UN International Youths Day.
“So I am 63 and I am not yet done. So what is your excuse? I never went
to a University and I am proud to say so because I don’t think I have done
too badly,” she said during the motivational talk.
The Nigerian businesswoman explained to the students that while a
University degree is important and can significantly improve one’s
prospects in life, hard work and persistence were the most crucial tools for
success.
“You do not have to have a university education to be able to make it so
count yourselves privileged to have that education as part of the feather in
your cap,” Alakija said.
Alakija pursued secretarial studies and fashion design as a young woman
in London, and then returned to Nigeria to work as a secretary in a
Merchant bank. She subsequently founded Supreme Stitches, a tailoring
outfit that catered to upscale clientele including Nigeria’s fashionable
former first lady Maryam Babangida. In 1993, she acquired an oil
prospecting license which granted her a lucrative block in Nigeria’s
coastal waters. Her company, Famfa Oil, now holds a 60% stake in the oil
field. She is also the founder of The Rose of Sharon Foundation, which
provides support to orphans and widows.
Forbes woman
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