A
15-year-old beggar, Mohammed Ismaila, is a regular face around Mile 12
area of Lagos State. Those who move between Mile 12 and Ikeja on daily
basis, will, at one point or another, see him crawling on his stomach
begging for alms.
He told PUNCH Metro that
despite that begging had been outlawed in the state, he took the risk
of crawling on the streets pleading for alms because he wanted to send
his younger ones to school.
Ismaila, who said he was the first of five children, added that he had been on the road for almost two years.
PUNCH Metro gathered
that his family relocated from Arewa, Kaduna, to Lagos, in search of
greener pasture. His mother, however, did not relocate with the rest of
the family, for undisclosed reasons. It was also learnt that his father
is a petty trader at Mile12 Market.
Ismaila
said, “I am used to crawling from Mile12, where I live to Ikeja
under-the-bridge every day. I want to train three of my siblings, who
are in school. I want them to have the advantage of education that I did
not have.
“Sometimes, some commercial bus drivers give me a ride in their buses to Ikeja, but many other days, I crawl.”
He
said he did not regret his disability because he believed that it was
the way God wanted it, adding that getting a wheelchair was not a bad
idea.
He
said, “I had been begging in Ikeja for almost two years now. I will not
give up because I get money from this and the money is used to send my
three younger ones to school. I am the first child but I prefer if my
younger ones are trained, because by God’s grace when they become
something in life tomorrow, they will help me too.”
The
beggar said he was not born crippled. He said the circumstances
surrounding his ailment was mysterious and could not be explained.
He
said, “I was not born this way. I woke up one morning and I could not
feel my legs; till today I still cannot feel my legs. I am the only
person in my family who is disabled. That is the reason why I believe
that it is the way God wanted it.”
A phone dealer, identified simply as Michael, said he had been noticing Ismaila crawling under the bridge for more than a year.
He said, “I opened a shop in computer village about a year ago, and I have been seeing this beggar.
“Motorists
pass in their flashy cars and splash mud and water on him. It is only
passersby and commercial motorists that give him money.”
Our
correspondent learnt that Ismaila brings spare clothes everyday, which
he keeps with an elderly woman, Mrs. Alice Johnson, who sells food under
the bridge.
Speaking
with our correspondent, she said, “I decided to help him keep his
clothes out of compassion. It is not easy to see someone like that and
just turn your back on such a person.
“I usually give him food every evening before he goes home.”
She said Ismaila usually gets to Ikeja by 7am and leaves by 6pm everyday.
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