There are people who leave home and never look back. Then there are people like Professor Wale Sulaiman, who went far, made it big, but never stopped thinking about his roots.
Despite the comfort and recognition that come with being one of the most respected neurosurgeons in the world, Professor Sulaiman never let his story end in the pages of foreign success. He kept writing new chapters back home, in Kwara South, where his heart truly lives.
Born and raised in Ajase-Ipo in Irepodun Local Government Area of Kwara State, Professor Sulaiman could have chosen to enjoy the soft life in America where he became a top medical expert. Instead, he chose a harder but more meaningful path: giving back, staying connected, and doing what many in his shoes only talk about, lifting his people with action, not empty promises.
From funding life-saving surgeries to empowering widows, from fixing what government forgot to touch, to creating opportunities that changed the lives of young people, Professor Sulaiman has done it all—not for headlines, but from a place of deep commitment.
Through the RNZ Foundation, which he runs with his wife, Mrs. Patricia Sulaiman, Professor Wale Sulaiman has taken on the kind of work most people in power shy away from. Over 4,000 people across 10 rural communities in Kwara South have benefitted from the foundation’s free medical outreach programs. These aren’t just quick visits with handouts—they include real consultations, minor surgeries, and medications that people would otherwise never afford.
At one point, he joined hands with other health-focused groups to sponsor over 500 surgeries at the General Hospital in Ilorin, worth ₦26.9 million. He didn’t just show up to smile for the cameras. He scrubbed in, operated, and stood with his people like the son of the land that he is.
Professor Wale didn’t stop at treating patients. He’s gone a step further to train the very hands that treat others. By opening doors for Nigerian medical students, resident doctors, and healthcare professionals to learn from top hospitals abroad, including his own hospital in the US, he’s building a future where Nigeria can stand on its own medically.
When Kwara’s oxygen plant went quiet for over ten years, it was Professor Sulaiman who led the move to bring it back to life. That single act improved the emergency care system in the state.
But even more quietly, and perhaps more powerfully, is how he supports people who are often ignored, especially women. Through the ₦3.5 million PWS Widows Endowment Fund, many women in Kwara South are now running small businesses, feeding their children, and standing on their own feet. He gave them dignity, not just donations.
This man doesn’t show up only when elections are near. When the Igbomina Youth Assembly needed a vehicle to move around for community work, he gave them one. Not to control them, not to gain their loyalty, but to show he sees what they are doing and wants them to do more.
In sports, he’s been a supporter of community tournaments, helping youths stay focused and united. In farming, his foundation supports smallholder farmers with access to good inputs and guidance. His message is simple: development must meet people where they are.
When he was appointed Special Adviser on Health to the Kwara State Government, he didn’t treat it as a title. He brought in ideas, strategies, and connections that helped improve healthcare across the state. Now, as the Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of the Federal University of Health Sciences, Ila-Orangun, he’s helping shape the future of health education in Nigeria.
In a time when many young Nigerians are searching for direction, Professor Wale Sulaiman stands as proof that you can succeed without forgetting where you started. His life teaches that success is not about escaping poverty and pretending it never touched you. It’s about turning your story into someone else’s rescue.
The youths of Kwara South see him and believe they too can rise without losing their values. He shows that being educated, wealthy, or powerful doesn’t mean you must become unreachable. He has remained accessible, humble, and present.
While many with titles hide behind gates and tinted glasses, Professor Sulaiman walks freely among his people, sleeves rolled up, making change with his own hands. He is not just a professor in the classroom or the hospital. He is a professor of compassion, of commitment, of what true leadership looks like.
Kwara South is not the same because of him—and that’s not just something to clap for. It’s something to learn from.
Olawale Timothy
Isin LGA, Kwara State.
08039646872
A youth who sees, remembers, and believes in community.