Usually, when a singer releases a song, it only stays in peoples’ consciousness for a few months or maybe just weeks, but that is not the case with “Way Maker.”
The song was released by the Nigerian gospel singer Sinach in 2015 and became a hit across Africa. It has also gained more than 151 million views on YouTube.
Now, five years after its release, “Way Maker” is causing stir again, this time as “the comfort song of the COVID-19 pandemic,” as CNN Africa’s Stephanie Busari put it in a recent interview with Sinach.
In
March, doctors and nurses from the Cartersville hospital in
Georgia, the US, for instance, got up on the hospital’s roof and sang “Way
Maker” to cheer people up during the Coronavirus crisis.
“It is surreal. It is amazing. I do not even know how to describe it, but it is
such a wonderful thought to know that what God gave you in your room can become
a comfort to so many people all over the world. It is like a dream come true.
It is like, ‘oh, is this really happening?’” Sinach said to CNN Africa.
She added that she still gets goosebumps when she sees people worshipping to her songs. Recently, she watched a video from a South Korean church where a choir sang “Way Maker” in its native language.
“I am blessed to see everybody singing the song,” the gospel superstar said.
Reaching a new audience
During the interview with CNN Africa, Sinach touched upon “Way Maker” also reaching a new audience because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
She
says that the song first became popular in black and Christian communities, but
that even non-Christians listen to it today.
“I think God is using this song to
comfort His people. He knew that this was coming,” Sinach
stated.
She also said that she thinks non-Christians are singing it now because the gospel is good news, and the world needs good news right now.
Racism is heartbreaking
Additionally, “Way Maker” has found its way to the Black Lives Matter movement, which has been making headlines across the globe after 46-year-old George Floyd died as a result of a white police officer kneeling on his neck in Minneapolis.
The incident has led to huge protests and demonstrations all over the world with people demanding an end to racism. In the UK, protestors, for instance, toppled a statue of the slave trader Edward Colston.
Last week, demonstrators in Milwaukee went out on the streets and sang Sinach’s “Way Maker.”
The
singer expressed that she is very concerned about racism.
“It is an unfortunate situation. I could not even watch the video (of George
Floyd). It was so heartbreaking, and I do not think that should happen to
anyone whether black or white,” she said to CNN Africa.
By the end of her interview with the news channel, she revealed that she is working on a new worship album and that a new song of comfort, hope, strength and victory is hitting the airwaves soon.
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