A casual greeting, but not quite casual
Davido, who needs no introduction in Nigerian music circles, bumped into Juma Jux and his wife Priscilla Ojo while they were in the capital for a performance. On the surface it was the sort of short, friendly exchange you’d expect — “Happy married life,” Davido said — and then the line that stuck: “Take care of my sister oh.” It sounded like a simple blessing. But it also landed with an odd resonance, because Priscilla is married now and the moment was filmed and shared, so everyone watching could read into it however they liked.
There’s something human about that sentence. It’s protective, sure; maybe a touch possessive, maybe just affectionate. I thought: he’s not delivering a press release, he’s speaking the way people speak in hallways and family gatherings — quick, direct, and a bit informal. You can almost imagine the quick laugh or the slight awkwardness that followed. It wasn’t staged. It felt like a person looking out for another person, in his own, slightly messy way.
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Why this mattered (and why people noticed)
You might think it’s odd that a short exchange would make news. But there’s context. Priscilla married Juma Jux earlier this year, and they just welcomed their son, Rakeem, in Canada on August 24. They were back in Lagos with baby Rakeem, and then headed to Abuja to perform at the Medicaid Cancer Foundation event on October 25. So there’s a freshness to their public life together — new marriage, new baby, public appearances. Add Davido into the frame, and it becomes more than a greeting; it’s a nod from one big name to another young couple navigating the spotlight.
People read into brief moments. Social media loves a line you can repeat, clip, and debate. And Davido’s words were simple enough to clip and share: a short blessing that reads easily as warmth. But because of things happening around these people — the family ties, the new baby, the public attention — the line carries a little extra weight. Not huge, but noticeable.
A backdrop of tension that no one can ignore
Now, if this were just a feel-good exchange, that would be that. But there’s also an ongoing public spat that gives the greeting a sharper edge. Davido and Iyabo Ojo, Priscilla’s mother and a well-known actress, haven’t been seeing eye to eye. Recently Davido unfollowed Iyabo on Instagram after she accused him of using the late singer Mohbad’s case to chase clout. That accusation, and the resulting online fallout, made headlines. So when Davido tells Juma Jux to “take care of my sister,” it doesn’t sit in a vacuum; people hear it amid a simmering family-meets-celebrity drama. Some might call it diplomatic, others might call it pointed. I’m not sure which I’d pick. It’s probably both, in a small, human way.
The scene itself felt unscripted. The trio were at a charity event — performing, mingling, doing the public things — and they cross paths. The cameras catch an exchange that’s over in seconds but then lives on through reposts and chatter. I watched the short clip (yes, I followed the link that was doing the rounds). You can see the ease, the quick smiles, and then the line. It’s not an argument. It’s not a grand reconciliation. It’s more like a handshake that also says, quietly: “We’re still connected, even if things are messy.”
What it suggests about people and public life
There’s a bigger point in all this, I think. Celebrities are people who get watched — every small gesture gets magnified. A brief “take care” from one star to another may seem small, but because of who they are, it gets turned into commentary on relationships, loyalty, and public image. Sometimes the simplest lines reveal more about ordinary human things than a hundred press statements do: care, concern, defensiveness, pride. You can feel all those options floating around that single sentence.
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Also, these moments remind me that life in the spotlight doesn’t stop being ordinary. People get married, have babies, travel for concerts, meet up at events, and exchange quick well-wishes — just like anyone else. But then the rest of us add layers: gossip, speculation, opinions. I admit I’m partly guilty, because I followed the video and then thought about motivations and meanings. Humans. We like to complicate simple things.
A final thought — small, not tidy
So what do we take from it? Maybe nothing dramatic. Maybe it’s a small, human instance of care — Davido telling a new husband to look after his sister. Maybe it’s a slightly loaded gesture given a backdrop of recent tension with the mother-in-law. Maybe it’s both. I like that ambiguity. It feels real. It doesn’t need a neat resolution. They were at an event for a serious cause — Medicaid Cancer Foundation — and that, to me, should be the bigger frame: people using their platforms to help, while still navigating the messy bits of personal life in public.
 
![Davido’s Quick Blessing — A Meeting That Meant More Than Words 1 ‘Take care of my sister’ — Davido tells Priscilla’s husband Juma Jux [VIDEO]](https://wowplus.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/take-care-of-my-sister-davido-tells-priscillas-husband-juma-jux-video.jpg)
 
                             
                                









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