Sammuel family

From WikiAlpha

Sammuel family is an affluential Abrahamic Creole revered clerical family resulting from the British penetration of the Nigeria's Delta starting, circa, in the 1600 AD. It emerged into prominence following the birth of the androgynous Sister A. Samuel whose affectatious androgyny resulting from, and resulted to, malicious mockeries and victimisations which influences and sustains the continuity and perpetuity of the family. Before the bitter experience of dispossession of building sites by rival claimants, and erasing of efforts by razing buildings built of personal debt, the androgynous sister was not concerned on procreation, but resulting from the bitter experience and considering the observations in the seventh and eight from the fourth of the biblical ecclesiastes, the sister fixated on procreation.

Individual identities from, and of, the family include: Emi, Fani, Femi, Kemi, Kome, Lemi, Lumi, Mami, Mimi, Nani, Nene, Remi, Ruki, Simi, Timi, Titi; to creolize the individuals.

Description

Resulting from the British penetration of the Nigeria's Delta, an androgynous sister Akporaro Sammuel, author of the first and second Biblical book of the second Sammuel now influential in the practice and spread of Santería, was born. Having experienced bitter enterprising which resulted to thier exhaustion, the sister fixated on procreation and attempted to drop the birth name entirely. However, the Central Bank of Nigeria had already introduced a banking policy that prevents identity fraud, thus effectively frustrating the sister from dropping their birth name. It was only possible to modify the birth name so that "Samuel" becomes the family name. Individuals from the family are androgynous, are Creole, and their collective name is from the Abrahamic legends. It is disputable that they are Christians. In efforts to evade exhaustion and expropriation, they are deliberately elusive. For distinction, the family name is spelt as "Sammuel". .