▲ 2.1k r/IgboKwenu+3 crossposts

Ulraine’s Kharkiv National Medical University announced the death of 23-year-old Nigerian student Nnani Adaobi Marian, who succumbed to severe injuries sustained during a Russian drone attack.

After being critically wounded, Marian was treated first in Kharkiv and then transferred to Germany, where doctors fought to save her life.

Despite their efforts, she passed away on July 5th in hospital

Marian began studying medicine at the university in 2020 and was remembered as a dedicated, talented and compassionate student.

She had participated in international academic programs, including internships at the University of Cambridge in 2024 and Turkey's Beruni University in 2025, where she expanded her medical knowledge and research experience.

https://x.com/stratcomcentre/status/2073815548572356699?s=46

u/KungFuBlackBelch — 2 days ago
▲ 1.1k r/Progressive_Catholics+2 crossposts

[Free Friday] ❤️‍🔥 1.2 M faithful joined Pope Leo XIV in Madrid for the Corpus Christi Mass and procession.

I am a lifelong Spanish Catholic, and I have experienced this papal visit with profound emotion and devotion. It is difficult to describe what it feels like to see hundreds of thousands of people occupy the main avenues of your country to publicly declare that God is the most important reality in their lives.

Seeing so many people kneel before Jesus truly present in the Blessed Sacrament was especially moving. In the very centre of Madrid an immense crowd fell silent in adoration. It was a powerful witness of faith, hope, and love for Christ.

I thank God for having been there. I pray that this visit to Madrid and other parts of Spain may be fruitful and may rekindle the faith of a Catholic people.

¡Viva Jesús Sacramentado! ❤️‍🔥

u/KungFuBlackBelch — 25 days ago
▲ 311 r/Nigeria_FreeSpeech+1 crossposts

This is what we all should be doing in rural areas

I'm so proud of this Nigerian youth, he is fighting for his future. Voter's awareness must be created, Nigerians must know what they are voting for!

u/KungFuBlackBelch — 1 month ago
▲ 276 r/Nigeria_FreeSpeech+1 crossposts

TIL Norway flew planes over Biafra to bring food to starving Children during the war

They risked being shot out out from the sky to deliver mostly dried fish to help with the severe protein shortage that was causing widespread kwashiorkor in Baifra.

Till today Norway is still sending aid to Nigeria. I'm grateful to Norway, yet ashamed that we've been an aid case since the 60s.

At what point do Africans stop collecting and start contributing? Even a child can't be sustained by a parent for over 60 years and still not contribute anything to help the sponsor. When do we change?

u/KungFuBlackBelch — 1 month ago