This season is usually the most colourful of the year. It is a time people look forward to, planned for as their holiday period of the 12 months to celebrate the yuletide with their family, friends and acquaintances.

However, there are those who are forgotten; those who have no families, who might not have food to eat, who are not as free as others out there. But Anie Ifeoma Amalonye, founder of Ify Autos, owing to her large heart, as she does regularly, has visited Ika Diocesan Orphanage and Motherless Babies’ Home/ Charity Foundation Headquarters, being run by Anglican Communion at No 1, Oriahi Street, Boji-Boji, Agbor, in Delta State, South-south Nigeria, to donate food items.

On the visit, the founder of Ify Autos took along with her a resounding message of hope and once again underlined the fact that the automobile company is family to those who are victims of circumstances that were not of their own doing and, have been rejected by the very same society that should have taken up their plights.

The joy on the faces of those orphans on the visit by the owner of Ify Autos was that of bright sunshine after the storm, as they took delivery of the bags of rice, cartons of noodles, food drinks, and other essential household items.

It is customary for the delectable entrepreneur Anie Ifeoma Amalonye, to embark on charitable outreaches to make cash and food donations to orphans and widows. As misunderstood by many, giving to the needy is not a gift, it is function of the heart, love and care for the downtrodden, which the businesswoman had started long before she started her company three years ago.

“I have always been actively involved in supporting widows,orphans ,less privileged in the society even before the inception of ifyautos and I have continued in that light and hope to Increase the quota as ifyautos expands because I believe is my social responsibility in giving back to the society,” she stressed in an interactive session with journalists.

Philanthropists like the Ify Autos owner are extraordinary; they are bold, brave successful and live a life that inspires others. For a woman, she has demonstrated astounding courage and unmatched valiance.

Ify Autos is a global automobile company that deals in the importation and supply of cars in Canada and Nigeria. There has been argument that women are more daring than men, but not even by chance would anyone imagine that a woman would be brave enough to engage in international car trade. It is not an area of business known for the faint-hearted, much less female folks.

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But it is deep that in her fearless strides, the Ify Autos boss has taken the company to great heights, grabbing markets in Canada, where she incorporated the company, and Nigeria, her home country.

It was certain that Anie Ifeoma Amalonye would become an entrepreneur at some point in her life, having grown in a family where she watched her mother, who was a civil servant, displayed pure entrepreneurial spirit, which she also imbibed, nurtured and practised right from her undergraduate days.

Before emigrating with her family to Canada where her incursion into supply of automobiles across the atlantic began, the Ify Auto Chief Executive Officer attended the popular Ambrose Alli University (AAU), Ekpoma, Edo State, for first degree, as well as her masters in International Relationals and Diplomacy.

The company currently has a branch in Canada and Nigeria where it delivers services to numerous clients.

Explaining in an interview what its purpose in the Nigerian market is, Anie Ifeoma Amalonye was quick to stress that the ultimate purpose is to manufacture automobiles in Nigeria for the West African market.

“To get ifyautos to the stage of manufacturing automobiles in Nigeria for Nigerians and west Africa at large”, she said.

On how she summoned the courage to become an entrepreneur, she added: “My mother as a civil servant was very industrious and I was very helpful as a child in the series of business ventures she embarked on at that time and that didn’t stop because even in my university days I combined study with business as an undergraduate and didn’t rely much on my parents.”