A Small Win For Man But A Big Win For Mankind
I had been seeing her
come to church once in a while. On that day, I asked Rosemary what she
was doing, and she responded, "nothing."
"What do you mean
nothing?" I asked. She responded she had completed her secondary School in
2016, but her parents did not have money to pay for her WAEC SSCE Exams; hence
she came back from School and sat at home in the village while her mates were
writing WAEC.
After the encounter
with Comfort (not her real name), the single mum that got pregnant again, I was
skeptical about helping just a random person in the village. I wanted someone
who would be serious and could see a glorious future beyond the village. I
assessed her and noticed she spoke good English, was confident and
level-headed. Her cousin, who finished secondary School but did not write WAEC
too, had gotten married and already had a child at the age of 19. I did not
want this for her.
I asked Rose if she
would like to go back to School and she quickly responded, "Yes,
Sir."
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| Rosemary on her Matriculation Day at Taraba State University |
That was the end of
October 2017. We needed to get her back to School to resume SS3 in time so that
she could be registered for WAEC and NECO SSCE. Most of the schools rejected
her as Secondary schools hardly accept new intakes into examination years.
Finally, her brother spoke to the Vice Principal of a Secondary School and got
me to talk to him too. After telling him a compelling story, the vice principal
agreed to admit her into SS3. Since the distance from the village to the School
was quite huge, we were left with no choice than to register her as a boarding
student. We prayed for her, and she left for School. By the end of November
2017, we paid for both WAEC and NECO exams, and by February 2018, we paid for
her JAMB exams. The School took all candidates to a Cyber Café to register for
the JAMB exams. The JAMB exams had become 100% Computer Based Tests. I honestly
took it for granted that most students in the village were not privileged to
operate a computer before, and most had and still have never done a Computer
Based Test. The School's candidates did a mock exam before the main JAMB exam,
and according to her, the manner of the exam was strange to most of them. She
did the JAMB and later sat for WAEC exams.
The JAMB result came
out, and she scored 154 out of a total score of 400. That was very discouraging
but I recalled that this was a girl that had not operated a computer all her
life up to a few days to the JAMB exam. She wrote her WAEC exams and NECO exams
and made all her papers scoring B in some subjects. Her dad scolded her for not
doing well in her JAMB. He felt she had disappointed the Pastor, who believed
so much in her. I told her, "we go again".
| Rosemary |
We registered her for
JAMB in 2019, and since she had only the JAMB exam to write, she had ample time
to practice writing tests, using a personal computer. When the results came
out, she scored 184. My heart sank. How would she get admission with a score
less than the average mark? Nevertheless, I helped her pursue her admission at
the JAMB office; guided her towards uploading her WAEC results on the JAMB
portal; and contacted someone at the university she chose as first choice to
alert us and guide us on what we needed to do.
I was preparing for
church on the 31st of December when I saw several missed calls on my phone. I
called back, and it was Rose screaming with excitement that she had been
offered admission into Taraba State University. My joy knew no bounds. What a
New Year present it was. Apparently, the admission had been on the JAMB portal
for some days but we did not know. It could have expired as the School had
already resumed for the new academic session. It was a race against time. She
needed to travel all the way from Abuja to Taraba State. We needed money and I
was cash strapped at that time. I made some frantic calls to some friends and
posted the story on some WhatsApp groups. Some of my friends responded
positively and sent money immediately. She left for the School in a journey
that took about 14 hours. Her first time of embarking on such a long journey,
but she did not mind. She made it to the School just in time for the
registration, and she settled down fully as a student of Theatre Arts in Taraba
State University.
I gave a testimony in
church and thanked God it was not a wasted effort. Writing her story gives me
joy as part of my achievements in Gbaukuchi village. I pray for and speak to
her weekly to be sure she is on the right track.
However, I always
imagine many students like Rose, whose futures and destinies have been
truncated due to their location or lack of resources and proper guidance. Every
child deserves an education. It is a 'Right' and never a 'Privilege'.
This might be a small
win for man but indeed, a big win for mankind.
| Rosemary taking her admission oath |
| Rosemary (middle): Initiation into the Dept of Theatre Arts |
| Initiation into the dept of Theatre Arts |
| Rosemary Igbahon |

This is truly inspiring, she'll be an encouragement to all those who are going through or had gone through what she faced.
ReplyDeleteGod bless you.
Wow!!!!. This is really inspiring. She will go places by God's grace. God bless your efforts Sir.
ReplyDeleteGreat one Sir
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteAm touched
ReplyDeleteAm really glad for her..she will go places in Jesus name Amenot.
AMEN**
ReplyDeleteSee as i am smiling reading this great testimony. I am so happy for you Sir. A seed sown will germinate to a tree, just one seed at a time.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations Rosemary, make Jesus proud.
This is so inspiring.. God bless you sir
ReplyDeleteGod bless you for this sir
ReplyDeleteThank you Jesus
Wow! This is so inspiring! Good job Rose.keep your head up!
ReplyDeleteVery touching & inspiring testimony. May the good Lord strengthen your hands to keep up this good work. Well done!
ReplyDelete