The Nowa Omoigui Centre for the advancement of art, history, and medicine (“the Nowa Centre”), is a family driven initiative set up as a tribute to the legacy of Dr. Nowamagbe Austin Omoigui, and to preserve his intellectual property and body of work in the three fields of endeavor that represent his life’s work written over many years and covering topics ranging from Nigerian and Edo history to geopolitics to national security. Proposed to be situated in Edo, Lagos, or Abuja, the Centre would be open to the public as a veritable and authentic repository of information for general interests and scholarly pursuits.
The overarching goals and objectives for the Centre is to create a virtual and physical research hub within Benin City and globally. The Centre would curate rare historical materials and publications inclusive of historical artefacts and archeological findings of significance. The Centre will also encourage and solicit the donation of books, articles, artifacts, art, mementoes and other items of ancient and contemporary significance by individuals and families with due recognition accorded.
Dr. Nowa Omoigui intentionally chose not to commercialize his vast trove of scholastic works. In his unending quest to share his gifts with the public at large, he was of the strong belief that his writings were an endowment to humanity. We regard it as an obligation to commemorate and promote his worldly scholarship, and to use the proceeds to fund ongoing educational initiatives in his name.
The Centre is committed to serving the public, in resonance with what Dr. Nowa Omoigui cherished most, which was service to the public, and his work dedicated to the advancement of society.
About Dr. Nowa
Dr. Nowamagbe Austin Mitchell Omoigui was a pre-eminent interventional cardiologist in Columbia, South Carolina, and foremost Nigerian- American civil-military historian.
Born in the United Kingdom and raised in Nigeria, Dr. Omoigui was a precocious talent who set records everywhere he went. He graduated from high school (with the ordinary level school certificate as it was known at the time) at age 15, from Federal Government College, Warri in Nigeria. He graduated with distinction and set a record as the first in the history of the school (and one of the first in the West Africa) to obtain a Grade A1, the highest available grade, in Fine Arts.
In 1975, after a year at King’s College in Lagos, Nigeria (where he had entered for the advanced level, higher school certificate as it was known at the time), he gained admission to study Medicine at Nigeria’s premier medical school, the College of Medicine, University of Ibadan. In 1981, he graduated at the top of his medical school class with distinction and delivered the valedictory speech. After the required internship (as a house officer), he spent a mandatory year of service at the Nigeria Army Brigade of Guards where he set new records by coordinating a never-done-before air, sea, and land military disaster drill, and received a National Award in recognition of his contributions from the then President of Nigeria, Alhaji Shehu Shagari, in 1983.
In the U.S., he did his post-graduate medicine residency at St. Mary’s Hospital in Rochester, NY and later served as Chief Resident at Cook County Hospital in Chicago. He obtained a master’s degree in public health with particular interest in Health Resource Management and Policy, from the University of Illinois. Nowa completed a residency in cardiology at Stanford University and in Interventional Cardiology at the Cleveland Clinic (America’s best heart center). After relocating to the U.S., Nowa continued his tradition of collecting awards and setting records. He was awarded the Timothy Beckett (1992) and Hewlett Packard (1993) Awards, and awards for excellence as a post-doctoral fellow in Cardiovascular Disease.
He set the record among clinical fellows at the Cleveland Clinic for the highest number of abstracts submitted and presented (as first author) at a single National meeting (American Heart Association 1994). Dr. Omoigui also published numerous research papers in many of the world’s most prestigious medical journals. Importantly, he set a new record when he became the first Nigerian (and African) immigrant, and perhaps the youngest ever to do so, to be Chief of Cardiology at the University of South Carolina in December 1994 at the age of 35.
In 1996, he was the Chief of Cardiology, the Program Director of Cardiology Fellowship, Director at the VA Medical Center, and the Chairman of the Governing Board of Regents. During the Desert Storm military campaign, Nowa logged into the high-level war-room that was full of military Generals, discussing tactics and strategies of military warfare.
Dr. Omoigui was an academic researcher, a masterful orator, a precociously gifted painter, a world-renowned military historian and was widely recognized for his scholarship on national security, civil-military relations, national and traditional history, and politics.
Known for his intellectual sagacity, his polymathic breadth and depth of knowledge, expertise and interests, and his charmingly disarming sense of humor coupled with the loudest laugh this side of the Atlantic Ocean, Dr. Omoigui was a force of nature. Ever simple yet beautifully complex, he combined the perspicacious erudition of a sage with the boundless curiosity and passion of a child. He had an encyclopedic brain and a beautiful heart. He was sui generis, one of a kind, and just a genuinely great person.
Best Author Awards 2012
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World's #1 Best-selling Book
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NYT Best-selling Author 2014
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Best Author Awards 2018
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1999
My First Award
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