Open Letter to Umar Caculate: Go’ Sin No More

I write to you not out of anger but from a place of deep concern and earnest hope. It is never easy to call someone to accountability, but sometimes, love requires it. Your recent actions—whether careless words, harmful choices, or wilful misconduct—have left ripples that extend far beyond you. They have affected people who once trusted you, admired you, or looked up to you.

Umar, you are not beyond redemption. None of us are. But you must first recognise the weight of what you’ve done—not just in man’s eyes but before God. What we do in darkness always comes to light. While society may provide opportunities for redemption, genuine transformation necessitates internal transformation. That’s why the message is not a message of condemnation but of invitation: go, and sin no more.

From the beginning of your fascination with this Facebook enthusiast that you granted an interview to, where you rained all sorts of insults and accusations on leaders, I knew you would self-destruct.

Imagine you spending the Eid El Kabir behind bars. Where are those you claim to be fighting for in all of your travails? First, you went haywire on the governor for reasons best known to you. In all of this, the former vice president you claim you are fighting for has his beloved son working with the governor; he has his beloved boys working as commissioners for the governor. Do you think they are timid? The answer is no; no matter how you claim you love the former vice president, you can’t love him more than his son. What is your problem?

Imagine How difficult was it for you to secure your bail from the court? Where are the people cheering you on to insult leaders? nowhere.

The phrase may sound old-fashioned, even harsh, to modern ears. But it is filled with mercy. It is what Jesus told the woman caught in sin—not to shame her, but to free her. It’s a call to rise from brokenness, to leave behind whatever habits or choices have pulled you down, and to walk a different path.

You have talents, influence, and a voice that people still listen to. Imagine what good you could do with it if guided by truth, humility, and integrity. Repentance isn’t weakness; it’s strength. It means taking responsibility, seeking forgiveness, making amends, and choosing not to repeat the same wrongs.

This process is not about perfection. It’s about transformation. It’s about becoming a man who chooses the hard right over the easy wrong. You can rebuild what’s been broken, restore what’s been lost, and regain trust—not instantly, but over time, through consistent right action.

So, Umar Caculate, I urge you: pause, reflect, and make a new beginning. The world doesn’t need another fallen figure who refused to change. It needs leaders who fall and rise again—better, wiser, and more just.

Go and sin no more—not out of fear, but because there’s a better way. This is the path of truth, humility, and genuine character.

A Concerned Observer

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