By Fr Chidi Philip Ezeani
Okolie Ngozika Fransica was a daughter of Mr and Mrs Okoli from Nkolofia village, Awka Etiti, in Idemili south Local Government Area of Anambra State, Nigeria. She was a simple soul, gentle in spirit, dignified in character, and full of holy dreams waiting to be fulfilled.
Fransica completed her secondary education and chose to stay back to help her mother in the market. She was hardworking and very good at trading, not because she loved money, but because she loved her family. At the same time, God was quietly planting something deeper in her heart: a vocation to become a Reverend Sister. She even gained admission into the university, holding together both her academic dream and her religious calling.
She was a very active member of the Catholic Youth Organisation of Nigeria (CYON). During the Stations of the Cross in Lent, she once played the role of Veronica, a role that mirrored her own life: courage, compassion, and quiet strength. Fransica admired faithfulness in action. She attended morning Mass every single day.
When she started working, she developed a holy habit: before going home, she would first stop at the parish to pray before the Blessed Sacrament.
She was very helpful to her family, and because of her beauty and character, many advances came her way. On her way home, young men would stop her, trying to talk to her, asking her to be their girlfriend. But that was not her focus. Her heart was set on helping her mother, supporting her family, and responding to God’s call. She was focused. She knew what she wanted from life.
Then came that godless night.
In the early hours of a Sunday in 2012, around April, Fransica was dressing up for First Mass at St. Joseph catholic Church awka etiti. The light was suddenly cut off. Darkness covered everything. Armed men invaded the house. They used a rope on her father and mother, and both parents became unconscious.
They ordered Fransica to strip naked. She refused. Her mother tried to help, but her head was badly injured. They dragged Fransica out of the house, intending to rape her. She screamed. She cried out. But the place had been locked. Her mother could hear her voice but could do nothing.
According to her mother’s testimony, Fransica cried out: “I would rather die than allow you to touch me.”
They beat her mercilessly. They struck her again and again. She kept repeating her cry of resistance, of dignity, of faith. And then… they left her lifeless.
She was killed because she refused to give them what they wanted.
Fr. Peter Anaele, who was the chaplain of the hospital, later went for a purification prayer because the place had become an eyesore, stained with innocent blood. The attackers were said to be about six young men.
After Fransica’s death, her family never recovered. Her mother’s life changed completely, and later she died. The same happened to her father. They are no longer alive to testify fully to the holy life their daughter lived on earth.
Fransica’s intention was to become a Reverend Sister.
She was a girl of dignity. She had a goal to fulfil. She chose God, because she knew that if she had God, she lacked nothing.
Today, Okolie Ngozika Fransica may not be canonized by Rome, but she is canonized in the hearts of those who knew her. She died defending her virginity, her faith, and her body as a temple of God.
She lived quietly.
She died loudly.
And her life still preaches.
May her soul rest in perfect peace.
And may her courage never be forgotten.












































