MADAM BOLI
MADAM BOLI
I'm Ojo Sunday Ikponmwonsa, a graduate of Ambrose Alli University, walking the streets of Warri, Delta State as God's Kingdom Harvester—preacher, teacher, writer, and soul-chaser.
During my prayer walk this afternoon, the sun blazing, I spotted a woman roasting plantain by the roadside. The sweet smoke rose as she "romanced" the bole with her bare, unwashed hands—turning, touching, checking if it's well roasted. I thought: "Are her hands clean enough? People don't wash the plantain before they chop it!"
We always say the fire's heat kills the germs from sneezing, scratching, holding kerosene or charcoal. But how true?
*Quick truth:* The charcoal fire gets super hot (200–300°C+), killing most bacteria (E. coli, Salmonella, etc.) at 65–75°C. So *yes, the roasting heat usually zaps germs* from her hands—it's a natural kill step!
But not 100%: Some toxins survive, and post-roast touching adds risks. Choose hot, fresh ones, peel yourself, and pray!
*Health is wealth.* Only God go help us no chop wetin go kill us! 🙏🔥🍌
Keep walking in faith, brethren. The road teaches, the fire refines—even on these Warri streets! 😊
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