For a few days now, people in India have suddenly been talking about American rapper Nicki Minaj. On her Instagram page, Nicki posted that she had been sending money to a village in India for the last couple of years.
While Nicki Minaj herself just spoke about four particular programmes in the unnamed village, the headlines that followed were the kind that painted pictures of a poor village in ruins saved by a star.
But where is this village? And how has Nicki Minaj’s money been used to transform it? No one knew the answer, until now.
The News Minute visited the ‘village’ – except, this ‘village’ is in Chennai. To be specific, it’s Thiruvalluvar Nagar in Ennore, approximately 40 minutes away from the Chennai Central Railway Station with average traffic.
And behold the ‘transformation’ that some sections of the media have been harking about: Inside a church in the bylanes of Thiruvalluvar Nagar is a ‘Supernatural Computer Centre’ with four computers, and a ‘Supernatural Tailoring Centre’ with a bunch of sewing machines! They also have a few teachers to take lessons for the students.
To be fair to Nicky, she didn’t exactly claim a transformation – that ‘supernatural’ claim rests with the media alone.
But if a rich and popular rapper from America has been sending money to this ‘village’ for years, surely the end result isn’t a bunch of machines that any under-funded NGO in India would be able to put together?
Inside Thiruvalluvar Nagar in Ennore is the Kirubasanam church – home to Pearl Foundation. Within this church is the computer centre that Nicki Minaj mentions in her Instagram post: Four computers spread across a room, with a huge poster of apostle Lydia Woodson Sloley dominating the room.
Apostle Lydia – mentioned in Nicki Minaj’s Instagram post – is a senior pastor and founder of Life in its Poetic Form Christian Ministries, or LIPF, which is based out of Brooklyn in New York. She’s the author of three books, including one called The Supernatural Woman, and changes people’s lives in her supernatural ways.
And that, of course, is the reason why the computer centre and tailoring unit are called ‘Supernatural’.
LIPF has tied up with the Pearl Foundation to help the women in Thiruvalluvar Nagar in Ennore – the village that actually isn’t a village. With funds from Nicki Minaj, Pearl Foundation in association with LIPF also runs a computer centre in Kolathur, which has six computers, and has dug up a well in the village of Atipattu.
Once we solved that mystery, TNM set out to find out exactly how the ‘Supernatural’ centres have transformed the village that isn’t.
According to Manimegalai, a caretaker at the church, around 50 children come to the computer centre everyday to learn MS Office, C++, Photoshop and Tally.
The tailoring unit has so far taught 60 women how to stitch, the foundation claims. In addition to tailoring and computer classes, the foundation also conducts tuition for underprivileged children.
While there’s no doubt that the centre is helpful to the women and children in the area, the media’s claims of ‘transformation’ and ‘total development’ are clearly overstated.
So how much of Nicki Minaj’s money has gone into a few computers and some tailoring machines? The answer, as TNM was told by Pastor John Samuels, was confidential.
John Samuels is the man in the video Nicki Minaj posted on Instagram. Currently in Germany to attend a conference, the pastor replied to TNM’s questions via email. While he confirmed the tie-up between LIPF and Pearl, he conspicuously left the answer to one question blank: Does the foundation do conversions?
Manimegalai, the caretaker of the church, told TNM the story of her own conversion.
But TNM asked Elizabeth whether or not this video of the pastor claiming that women are baptised here, create a certain perception. In retort, she says:
The celebrity, according to CBS News, is worth $70 million. While she may have done more charities through the 'supernatural' centres, this is what TNM was able to find in the villages of Chennai.
(This story was originally published on The News Minute)
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