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Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper - Education - Nairaland

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Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Umartins1(m): 12:09pm On May 17, 2020
Life as an almajiri in Kano was very tough. I could still remember how we went about in tens begging for alms and food. It’s really not a life anyone should live. I lived it years ago and could still tell exactly how it hurts; the memory of it and the hellish experiences we had to bear. Almajiri life isn’t a life. It’s like being dead-alive. I lived that life.

I was ten when I decided to remove the cloak of destitution and face life squarely. It still remains the turning point in my life and the wisest decision I’d ever taken.

I could still remember vividly what led me to take such a decision one afternoon. It was at Sabon Titi Kano. We were nine in number. We had trekked all the way from Bida Road. Ali, my best friend was saying something about how very unfair it was that girls were not allowed to wander about begging as boys did. He said something about girls being lucky and fortunate because they were not subjected to the demeaning life that we lived.

“But you don’t have to think that way,” I said. “You know that if you lived a good life here on earth, you surely would enjoy in heaven when you die.”
Ali had always thought differently. He was thirteen years old. Several times he would tell me that we should elope."

He said he didn’t like the way the Mallami treated us. According to him, we were treated as slaves and it was very unfair. Ali was the first ever almajiri I had seen who did not like his being a poor beggar. He always compared himself with the children of the rich.

Do you think Mallam Ladan will ever allow his own children to move about aimlessly in the streets begging as we do?” he often asked me. “He will never do a thing like that. His children eat good food and go to the white man’s school but we don’t. And every day, we take money that we make from begging to him. That is not fair.”No one hated Mallam Ladan as much as Ali did at that time.

Mallam Ladan had always said that Ali was rebellious and that he behaved like an infidel.

One day, and according to him, all infidels would never gain paradise where there were lots of merriments. I remembered one day Ali had asked a question during our usual group recitation of the holy book and Mallam Ladan, red with indignation ordered that Ali should be whipped.

According to him, Ali had asked a blasphemous question. Since then, Ali expressed his displeasure and irritation about the Mallam secretly to me. So, the day I finally made up my mind to quit almajarinci was at Sabon Titi.

We gathered around a very busy canteen owned by a woman from Lafia whom everybody referred to as Mama Nassarawa. She had a very large open space with huge patronage. Most often when any of her many customers ate to their fill and there was leftover, we would swing into action. It was usually like warfare. Our survival-of-the-fittest lives were hugely dependent on the miserable remnant from the food Mama Nassarawa’s customers left in their plates. Keenly, we watched from a close distance as the customers ate. Our eagle eyes moved from customer to customer and hand to hand. Contrary to what people think, the almajiri usually had more than enough to eat but we ate like swine; unhealthy and without control.

There was a very beefy fellow eating a fat meal. He had so many pieces of meat in his soup which attracted some of us; I especially had had the rare opportunity of eating meat and fish many a time. This would happen when some people barely touched their food before passing it to us. I had often wondered then why some people would eat only little food and be satisfied. Ali had also wondered too. He had told me once that he had never had a full stomach. He would emphasize further that until his hand got tired of conveying the food from the plate to his mouth, he would always continue to eat.

The beefy fellow at Mama Nassarawa made me have a rethink that day. He was eating pounded yam. Ali and I fixed our eyes on him. Suddenly, I noticed something rather strange.

Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Umartins1(m): 12:10pm On May 17, 2020
This fat customer was drooling like a toddler. Saliva dropped from his mouth into his soup as if there was a burst tap in his throat. We were supposed to take a dive for the leftover of that food! Mere looking at him made me sick.

“Ali, can you see what is happening?” I muffled. “Can you see the way that man’s saliva fall freely into his soup?”
Ali smiled. “Abubakar, I am really shocked at what you are saying.” Do you mean to tell me that you haven’t seen something like this before?

I can swear by my life that most of these people there are sick. And because we eat what they leave behind, we are very likely to share in their misfortune since most illnesses are contagious. Abu, we are walking corpses.”

His response gave me goose pimples. That was the day Ali and I made up our minds to go out there and change our stories and destinies. In life, Allah gives us all equal opportunities. He gives us same air to breath and same time; twenty four hours daily to live in.

No one has more time than others. What we do with the time and how we choose to breath is dependent on the choices we make. Some make good choices and others don’t.

“Ali,” I muttered coldly, “may Allay forbid that I eat the leftover food from that man.” For the first time since we became friends, Ali hugged me. “Abu, you have said a noble thing. If you mean what you have said then we must elope. We must leave now. There’s nothing as sweet as freedom.” We both separated from the other boys that day and threw our beggarly bowls away. That night, we found a Dangote trailer which was about leaving for Lagos. It had just the driver and his conductors. Ali and I sneaked into it when no one was watching and in no time, our journey out of Kano began.
It was not until we got to Suleja that the driver and his conductor found us in their vehicle. They had stopped along the Abuja-Kaduna Road to refuel and eat. It was past ten. The conductor pointed his torch and saw us sleeping in a corner.

“Subanalahi!” he exclaimed rather surprisingly. “Ahmadu come and see these miserable elements sleeping in our vehicle.”
The driver climbed up and found Ali and me in the truck. I was shocked when he asked if we had eaten. Ali and I replied in unison that we had not eaten. He ordered us to climb down the truck. We followed them to a food vendor’s place where he bought us good food. It was the very first time that we would be having such good meals without begging for it.

After we had told him our story, he advised that we find a mosque in Suleja to spend the night.
“If you go to Lagos, you will suffer. The people there will not help you. They will tell you to go to your parents. You are still in the north. People here will understand why you are out of school at this age. This is why you should be here and not in Lagos. I will advise that you get shoe shining kits and begin to render services to people. Whatever you make could feed you and you will have a little to save for school.”He gave us two hundred naira each and reiterated that we must use it wisely. The money at that time was big.

How Ahmadu understood us and promptly decided to come to our aid still baffles me to this day. When their vehicle left, we spent the night at Kaduna Road on a plank beside a parked lorry. At dawn, we went to a nearby stream and bathed. It really felt so good that day because it seemed we were no longer under anyone who would dictate for us. That day, we found some cobblers and they told us how to go about getting all the kits and how to do the job. In three days, we were already dexterous shoe shiners. Days later, we were brilliant cobblers. On our twelfth day on the job, an Igbo trader whom we went to his house to polish his shoes – nineteen pieces in all – took pity on Ali and me and ask a few questions.

“You people are too young to do this job you are doing,” he said. “Don’t you have plans to go to school?”
Ali and I told him that we had already bought all our note books.
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Umartins1(m): 12:12pm On May 17, 2020
It’s our uniforms that are left for us to buy,” I told him.

He was leaning on his car and from the way he kept nodding; it was obvious that he was impressed with what we’d told him. He insisted we show him the books we had bought. Ali quickly ran to the shop where we had already paid for the books but were yet to be supplied to fetch them

In no time, he was back with them. That day after we had finished polishing his shoes, Mr. Okafor gave us money to buy our uniforms. He said he would have taken us and given us a place to stay but that we were too young and he could be accused of abduction.

“Come here when your uniforms are ready,” he told us.
That was how Allah used Mr. Okafor to change our story in 1992. He took us to a public primary school and registered us.

Some people are angels and when you are lucky to meet them, they don’t care what your tribe or religion is before they choose to help you. Mr. Okafor was such a person. Ali and I began to sleep in one of his warehouses at night with some of his workers – mostly Hausas who help to offload his goods. His wife treated us like her own children. She would give us food and some of her children’s old clothes.

Tragedy struck in the year2004 when Ali and I were at ABU Zaria. Mr. Okafor had an accident on his way to his village and died. I thought this would affect us but Obinna, his eldest son took over his fabric business and still carried on as if nothing had happened. The relationship we had with the family blossomed. When we returned from school, we would work in one of their warehouses until the holiday was over. There was never a time we called Obinna and told him we needed money and he didn’t respond.

After my service in 2010, I joined the custom service while Ali through one of his friends whom he met in school became a politician. He is a lawmaker in his state house of assembly. He is doing great. We are both doing great and still good friends.

And we are still very close to the Okafors. Ours is a relationship that would last until the day Allah calls us. Our story has taught me that the saying ‘man is the architect of his own fortune,’ is very true. And also, when there’s a will, there surely will be a way. Don’t let anyone deceive you, there is light of every dark tunnel for everyone. We only remain in the darkness of the tunnel because we are just too scared to approach the light. if we make a move, we surely would be out of the tunnel.

I got married in 2015 and Obinna and his mother attended the wedding. They were also in Ali’s wedding too a year before.

When we fight over tribe or religion, we do so because we are largely ignorant of our existence and how Allah can use us as angels to help one another. Humanity should always count because we are all one and the same. It is needless for us to keep pointing guns and raising daggers at one another.

Culled from THE ALMAJIRI by Japheth

Lalasticlala, seun
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Toluabigr8(m): 12:20pm On May 17, 2020
interesting
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Umartins1(m): 12:26pm On May 17, 2020
Toluabigr8:
interesting

Very, very, changed my perspectives of the Almajiris a bit

1 Like

Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by JoinForsage: 12:28pm On May 17, 2020
An average Nigerian is Almajiri. Everyone is suffering and struggling. Those ones on the street are just being ignoble about it. They don't deserve any pity than any other Nigerians.

We're equal!
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Toluabigr8(m): 12:33pm On May 17, 2020
JoinForsage:
An average Nigerian is Almajiri. Everyone is suffering and struggling. Those ones on the street are just being ignoble about it. They don't deserve any pity than any other Nigerians.

We're equal!
I strongly agreed with you most Nigerians are almajiri both people on the street and ONLINE BEGGARS. I'm just wondering how Nigeria of 10years time would look like just wondering
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by olawalepopoola: 12:36pm On May 17, 2020
Fantabulous.
My question is did he convert from Islam to Christainity because his present name reflects it
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Nobody: 1:25pm On May 17, 2020
olawalepopoola:
Fantabulous.
My question is did he convert from Islam to Christainity because his present name reflects it
He shared the story on behalf of someone.
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Nobody: 1:54pm On May 17, 2020
I had first hand encounter with almajiris as a corps member in Kano. Life is just too harsh on those helpless kids. You see them, wandering aimlessly, on dirty clothes and bare feet, with plastic plates, begging for food and eating leftovers at restaurants.
The government and other well meaning individuals need start fending for those kids, followed by implementing strict birth control measures in the North.
Stop birthing kids you can't cater for, only to end up sending them to the streets.
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Umartins1(m): 2:41pm On May 17, 2020
Quinex2:
I had first hand encounter with almajiris as a corps member in Kano. Life is just too harsh on those helpless kids. You see them, wandering aimlessly, on dirty clothes and bare feet, with plastic plates, begging for food and eating leftovers at restaurants.
The government and other well meaning individuals need start fending for those kids, followed by implementing strict birth control measures in the North.
Stop birthing kids you can't cater for, only to end up sending them to the streets.

You think strict birth control will work in the core north?
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Nobody: 4:05pm On May 17, 2020
Umartins1:


You think strict birth control will work in the core north?
It should, if we can adopt something similar to China's approach.
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Umartins1(m): 8:26pm On May 17, 2020
Quinex2:
It should, if we can adopt something similar to China's approach.

Hmm... What's the Chinese approach all about?
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Nobody: 9:40pm On May 17, 2020
Umartins1:


Hmm... What's the Chinese approach all about?
They came up with very crazy sanctions for couples that failed to comply with birth control policies. See below:


Couples governed by the one-child policy have more than one child, they are fined “$370 to $12, 800,” an amount many times the average annual income of many Chinese (Hays). If the couple is unable to pay the fine, they may lose their jobs, their land and livestock confiscated, their home destroyed, their children denied the rights and benefits of the state, like education, or their child taken away. The woman can also be forced to be sterilized (Hays). If a family planning official discovers that a woman is having an illegal pregnancy, meaning having a child without a birth permit, he or she can force the woman to have an abortion (Fitzpatrick). The Chinese government has ensured terrible consequences for failing to comply with the one-child policy.
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by CanadaOrBust: 6:42am On May 18, 2020
Quinex2:
I had first hand encounter with almajiris as a corps member in Kano. Life is just too harsh on those helpless kids. You see them, wandering aimlessly, on dirty clothes and bare feet, with plastic plates, begging for food and eating leftovers at restaurants.
The government and other well meaning individuals need start fending for those kids, followed by implementing strict birth control measures in the North.
Stop birthing kids you can't cater for, only to end up sending them to the streets.

Don’t understand why this heart-warming true story is not on front page

Lalasticlala, Seun
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Nobody: 7:16am On May 18, 2020
CanadaOrBust:


Don’t understand why this heart-warming true story is not on front page

Lalasticlala, Seun
Cc: Lalasticlala, Seun, Mynd44.
Re: Life As An Almajiri (a True Story) By Japheth Prosper by Umartins1(m): 12:35pm On May 18, 2020
CanadaOrBust:


Don’t understand why this heart-warming true story is not on front page

Lalasticlala, Seun

Lol... If you can try and drag snake in, you'll have it on FP

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