Now Reading
Meet Wheelbarrow Pusher Pursuing Secondary School Education At 60

Meet Wheelbarrow Pusher Pursuing Secondary School Education At 60

In defiance to his old age, 60-year-old Adalabu Seribor, a wheelbarrow pusher, took everyone by surprise by deciding to get an education. He is now a JSS II student at Izon College, Bomadi-Overside in Bomadi Local Government Area of Delta State.

In a chat with Punch, Seribor said,

“I am sixty years now and I decided to go to school at this age because I perpetually feel the pain of being an illiterate in this modern world where everything has to do with English and education.

My mother died during child birth when I was a little boy while my father was a hunter. I was bred by a grandmother after the death of my mother and later taken to a step-mother when my father remarried.

I went through pains and hardship at my tender age to adulthood. It would interest you to know that I was so tender at the time my mother died that I was crying for food while she lay dead.

I went through struggles all through my life history. I had the opportunity to go to school at my young age, when a relative who was a magistrate at Ekeremor in Bayelsa State took me to his house.

READ ALSO: Never say never: Read the story of this 42-year-old woman in JSS 1

But because of early morning beatings due to my failure to greet him when rising from bed, I went back to my father. I had no opportunity to go to school since then, and continued in hard labour to survive in life, which I am still doing…I realized that without education, one cannot do well in this present society. I also do not want a situation whereby someone else would interpret or write for me if eventually I am chosen to hold an office in my community.

I make a living by pushing wheelbarrow. After school hours, I go back home to look for work to do, which I have been doing for a living. I pay my school fees from there. I am determined to complete my education because of the pains in my heart.

See Also

I see that one cannot do well without education in this society. I do various menial jobs for a living. I pack dirt from gutters; I pack sand, clear grasses in people’s compounds and pack soak-away faeces in the dead of the night. I am a JSS II student and by the grace of God, I will finish from this school.”

Seribor said he would proceed to Teachers’ Training College at the end of his secondary education in order to achieve his dream of becoming a teacher.

“I want to teach and I advised young boys and girls wasting their time and years roaming the streets to go to school. If I can go to school, then why are young people wasting themselves?”

Amazing!

View Comments (17)

Copyright © 2021 Motherhood In-Style Magazine. All Rights Reserved.