It’s hard to explain how different it is to live where we all eat well, 3 meals every day, with clean water to drink, to take our baths, to wash our clothes on Saturday. We have new clothes. We have shoes. How good it is to play football with friends in the evenings without fear! We sleep in peace every night. We don’t listen for noises that warn us Fulani are near our village. We don’t have gunfire and terror in the night. Instead, we hear singing. How can we explain how good peace is when all we remember is violence?
My name is Julius Adamu. I am 14years old, from Malagun
Kagoro town of Kaura LGA of Kaduna State, Nigeria. I can speak
Kagoro language, Hausa language, and now at CFM Crisis Care Home my English is
getting better every day. I am the third born in the family, but my family is
sad. The first sadness was our parents’ divorce. Our pastor was mad at them
because divorce is bad for children. The family shared us bigger children
between relatives: the two small ones followed my mother to her family village,
but I stayed with my grandmother, who is very old. Life is hard for everyone
because the Fulani herdsmen attack us again and again. There is no rest.
It is like this: we will be at home in the night. On good
days we eat in the afternoon, so those evenings our bellies are not growling. Our
village has no electricity, so we sit out with our neighbours, around a fire after
dark. Sometimes we sing, or Grandmother tells us stories and the grown-ups talk
until it is time to sleep on our mats. We had a kerosine lamp, but Fulani stole
it. My grandmother’s house is her third house I can remember. Fulani burnt the
other two and stole everything: our goats and chickens, even my two ducks. They
shot our dog. All our yams and the ginger grown to pay our school fees, our maize,
guinea corn, and millet from our grain store, her cooking things, farming
tools, lamps, clothes, everything worth stealing.
We hear faint noises far off in the bush: everyone is
silent, standing to listen, except Grandmother Nnandi. She does not hear well
anymore. Shouting in the distance. Fulani. We grab what we can and run fast
into the bush, away from the shouting. My father helps grandmother. Fulani have
no mercy, even our ancients and our babies are killed. My father says the
Fulani are full of tramadol, a drug that dulls their minds so they can do any
wickedness. Our men used to try to defend our village, but Fulani have better
guns. Too many of our men have died, so now we all run.
In August 2020 our pastor brought me to CFM’s Children’s
Crisis Care Home with 2 other children from our village so I could go to
school. It was a long time since I was in school so I could hardly remember my
letters. I spent a year in the special class, learning English and learning to
read again. Last September I started Primary Grade 3. If I work hard here, I
can get a good education. One day I will get a very good job, maybe I can be a
doctor, so I can help my family. I love my family so much. This brings me back
to great sadness again because of what happened at Christmas.
My father was the only health-care worker in our village,
and I was very proud of him, running the village clinic and helping our people,
but he was sick. He had viral hepatitis. Most of his salary was spent on expensive
treatment every month, so he could keep working. Each time he would get a bit
better then fall sick again. Hepatitis B cannot be cured with medicine. Maybe
one day I will help find a way to heal it. At Christmas my father was very sick
with it, and our pastor helped me to go home to visit him in the school
holidays.
That was when the
Fulani attacked again, Christmas Eve, 2022. Grandmother had gone to stay with
my aunty in another town and I was at home with my father. He was very sick in
bed. It was night. We heard the noises, then the shouting. We knew what it was:
we must run. My father tried, but he could not even stand. I bolted the doors
and windows. Silently, desperately, we prayed, waiting in the dark.
We heard them breaking in the house. We had to run. I tried
to carry my father but could not. He unbolted the window shutter above his bed
and ordered me to climb out and run. I was crying, No! No! He slapped my head and
ordered me, trying to push me out the window. A Fulani herdsman bust through
the bedroom door. There was nothing I could do so I jumped through the window.
Another herdsman outside the house grabbed my shirt but it was loose, and I
squirmed out and ran into the bush, blinded by tears. I am not ashamed that I
cried because I knew back there they were killing my father and I could do
nothing except run. My father wanted me to live so I must run and stay alive.
I kept running through the bush until the noise behind me
was very faint, then I found a big tree and climbed high, where the branches were
too thin to support the weight of any man pursuing me. No one did. I sat
silently weeping through the night, watching the red light of our burning
village in the distance gradually fade, after human noises stopped. The sounds
of the bush slowly returned with the dawn.
In the morning we all came back to the ruins of our village.
The men were digging a grave for my father. His body was covered with a cloth, laid
out before the roofless remains of our church. This time, his was the only
body. We wept again. Now there would be no health care for our people. Another
good man was gone, my father. My grandmother has no more sons. There was no joy
in our village at Christmas.
After we mourned our Pastor gathered me and the other two and
brought us back to CFM crisis-care home. It was not easy. We were very sad to
leave our families in such trouble, rebuilding the village again. Many other
villages in Kagoro LGA were also attacked around Christmas. Long before school
started again, Jan 9th, most of us from Kaduna State, 40 of us, were
back at CFM, where it is safe. Our families want us to be safe, to give them
hope for tomorrow. We know we must work hard in school because they will need
us. There are still 8 more Kaduna State children who have not yet returned. We
don’t know if they are alive or killed, because the phones of their families and
pastors are not contactable. We are praying that when the news finally comes it
will be good.
I know very well that God saved my life on Christmas Eve
when my father died. I am thankful. I am sad that we lost my father. God saved
me for a reason, and I want my life to count, for my family and for my people.
I am grateful we have somewhere safe to come, where I am putting my trust in
God and preparing for a better future, learning all I can in every way. I don’t
want to fight people, to be an angry person, but someone who gives hope to
other people, like the people here are giving us hope. I thank God for people
who help children like me, to make tomorrow better.
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