Posted in

What Did This 7-Year-Old Say That Made Steve Harvey Step Away From His Podium?

What Did This 7-Year-Old Say That Made Steve Harvey Step Away From His Podium?

"
"

Amara Okonkwo was 7 years old, wore a bright yellow dress with small embroidered sunflowers around the hem, and had walked onto the Family Feud stage at 10:08 a.m. on a Friday taping in Atlanta holding her grandmother’s hand so tightly that the 64-year-old woman’s knuckles had gone white. The little girl was not a contestant.

She was there as the youngest of five permitted family members in the audience-adjacent family box where relatives of the playing team could sit close to the stage. Her grandmother, Adaze, was on the playing team. Amara was supposed to stay in her seat. She had been told this by three different producers.

She had nodded seriously each time. She had sat in the family box through the first three face-offs swinging her legs against the base of her chair clutching a small stuffed elephant that had belonged to her mother, Chiamaka, before Chiamaka died of preeclampsia complications 48 hours after giving birth to Amara in June 2018. Amara had never known her mother.

She had been raised by her grandmother since she was 3 days old, first in Houston and then in a small house in Memphis after Adaze had moved to be closer to her late daughter’s grave. Amara’s father, a man named Obi Okonkwo, who had been present at the birth but had disappeared from Amara’s life within 9 weeks of Chiamaka’s death, had not been seen by either the child or her grandmother since October 2018.

He was not part of their lives. They did not speak his name. What Amara held in her small left fist in the front pocket of the yellow dress with the sunflowers was a folded piece of paper she had written on two days before the flight to Atlanta. The paper was addressed to Steve Harvey. She had written it herself in the careful printing of a 7-year-old who had learned to read at age four, and she had folded it into a small square.

Her grandmother did not know about the paper. Nobody knew about the paper. Amara had put it in her pocket on the morning of the flight and had kept her hand near it for the entire trip. And what she would do during the fourth face-off question of the taping, when she would quietly leave the family box without her grandmother noticing, walk 12 steps across the studio floor to the edge of the stage, and tug gently on Steve Harvey’s pant leg while he was reading a survey question, would be watched by 476 million people across 45 countries, and

would change what the little girl understood about who she was in the world. But nobody in that studio knew what was about to happen. The taping was scheduled for Friday, July 10th, 2026 at the Family Feud studio in Atlanta, Georgia. The Okonkwo family had flown in from Memphis on the Thursday evening before.

Adeze, her son Chukwudi, who was 34 and worked as an IT project manager at FedEx, Chukwudi’s wife, Folasade, Adeze’s sister, Ngozi, who had flown down from Chicago to round out the playing team, and 7-year-old Amara. Their opponents that morning were the Hendrickson family from Minneapolis, a four-generation Norwegian-American family led by a 79-year-old matriarch named Astrid, who had been a Lutheran church organist for 52 years.

The two families had met in the green room at 7:30 a.m. Astrid Hendrickson had knelt down in front of Amara when they were introduced and had complimented her on the yellow dress. Amara had curtsied, which she had learned at the community dance class her grandmother paid for on Saturday mornings. Astrid had laughed softly and said the little girl was the most elegant person she had met in 79 years of life.

Adaze Okonkwo Okonkwo had smiled at this, but her smile had been tight because she had been worrying since the flight about something specific that Amara had said to her on Wednesday evening at bedtime and that Adaze did not yet know what to do with. Amara had asked her grandmother while Adaze had been tucking her in whether Mr. Steve Harvey had daughters.

Adaze had said yes. Amara had asked whether Mr. Steve Harvey was a good father. Adaze had said she believed he was. Amara had been quiet for a long moment. Then she had said, “Grandma, do you think he knows what a good father does?” Adaze had not known how to answer this. She had said yes. Amara had nodded and had rolled over to sleep.

Adaze had sat on the edge of her granddaughter’s bed for 20 minutes wondering what the question had been about. She had not asked. Chiamaka Okonkwo had died on June 29th, 2018 at Texas Children’s Pavilion for Women in Houston. She had been 29 years old. She had been an occupational therapist who worked with stroke recovery patients.

She had given birth to Amara on June 27th at 11:48 a.m. after a difficult labor. The preeclampsia that had been monitored throughout the pregnancy had progressed after delivery into help syndrome, a rare and devastating complication. Chiamaka had held her daughter for approximately 4 hours on the afternoon of June 27th before being transferred to the ICU.

She had never held her daughter again. She had died at 2:33 a.m. on June 29th with her husband Obie at one side of the bed and her mother Adeze, who had flown in from Lagos, Nigeria, at the other side. Amara had been 48 hours old. She had been in the neonatal nursery. The nurse who had been caring for her that night, a woman named Diane Wilks, who had worked the night shift at Texas Children’s for 19 years, had heard the code being called over the PA system and had understood what had happened.

Diane Wilks had picked Amara up out of her bassinet. She had held the 2-day-old baby against her chest for the next 3 hours, walking slow circles around the nursery, humming softly, because Diane Wilks had decided that this particular baby was not going to be alone in the world during the hours her mother was dying.

Adeze had been told later, when she came to the nursery at 6:00 a.m. to sit with her granddaughter, that Amara had been held continuously by a nurse since 2:30 that morning. Adeze had not forgotten this. She had sent Diane Wilks a Christmas card every year since. Obie Okonkwo had stayed at the hospital for 2 days after Chiamaka’s death.

He had arranged the funeral. He had held his daughter for a total of perhaps 45 minutes across those 2 days. Something in him had broken in a way Adeze had recognized She had seen it in her own brother’s eyes in Lagos in 1978 after her brother’s wife had died in childbirth. It was a specific kind of breaking.

It did not always heal. Obi Okonkwo had returned with Adaze and Amara to the small apartment in Houston on July 4th, 2018. He had slept for 19 hours straight. When he woke up, he had told Adaze that he could not stay in the apartment. He could not be in the rooms where Chiamaka had been. He had told Adaze in a flat voice that she had found more frightening than if he had been crying, that he needed to leave for a little while.

Read More