Meet
69-Year old Warri bus stop tenant
Terseer adamu (Review)
For over six months now, Inside NigerDelta
has been on the trail of a 69-year old man who spends his days at a bus-stop.NIGERIA
MY COUNTRY, brings you the world of Pa Isaac Ogbunemo, the bus stop tenant,
whose condition reminds us of a need for old people’s homes.
His case evokes pity. From a distance, a passer-by will take him for the ubiquitous mentally deranged, but he is not. Perhaps the inclement socio-economic weather had only taken its toll on him. He fastidiously gazes at passers-by, mouth sealed, but his heart longs for alms. With his thick grey hair so conspicuous on his head, moustache and beard; one is informed that he has seen quite some days on earth. His eyes are agedly dim; his set of teeth, revealed at a smile, are multi-coloured, portraying some years of neglect, but obviously stuffed with the remains of every victual that has ever gone under the great human grinders!
His case evokes pity. From a distance, a passer-by will take him for the ubiquitous mentally deranged, but he is not. Perhaps the inclement socio-economic weather had only taken its toll on him. He fastidiously gazes at passers-by, mouth sealed, but his heart longs for alms. With his thick grey hair so conspicuous on his head, moustache and beard; one is informed that he has seen quite some days on earth. His eyes are agedly dim; his set of teeth, revealed at a smile, are multi-coloured, portraying some years of neglect, but obviously stuffed with the remains of every victual that has ever gone under the great human grinders!
This is the pathetic picture
of Mr Isaac Ogbunemo, an indigene of Eku near Ughelli, Delta State. For over
six months, this reporter has sighted and studied the man along the popular
Warri/Sapele Road. His abode is a bus stop directly by the fence of the Nigerian
Navy Ship (NNS Delta) and directly opposite Conoil filling station. Fear of
whether the man was psychiatrically challenged or not had hindered this
reporter from accosting him. His appearance is that of a short man with some
mental challenge.
Isaac is often in shorts and
T-shirts, which, this reporter learnt, are not got directly from care givers or
sympathizers, but from benevolent dunghills. Come rain or shine, his abode is
the bus stop that has no windows nor doors. It is open to inclement weather,
marauding hoodlums and creeping venomous reptiles. An orphan of a sort, Isaac
Ogbunemo is a victim of fate and his existential struggle to make a mark as a
farmer, according to him, was defeated at his early effort in life. Call him
“Isaac the Obscure,” you may be right as everything about him evokes pathos
and, at times, some humour.
His life is fast ebbing away.
He has no relation. His parents had died while he was still an infant. With no
wife let alone children, Isaac lives in between abject poverty and penury. By
his side are nylon bags stuffed with used and worn-out clothes, used plastic
plates and cups. A few of the pieces of cloth serve Pa Ogbunemo as bed spread
and cover cloth. The cement concrete seat built to serve as temporary seats for
passengers is his bed. He said he feels no body pains from his regular sleep on
the improvised hard bed.
Pa Ogbunemo does not go to barber’s
shops; he does his shaving himself, using razor blade with dexterity. His
teeth, though effectively put to use, but badly managed, is a potpourri of
rainbow colours. He defecates, according to him, at a nearby bush; takes his
bath from the river by the naval base, but urinates just behind his “mansion.”
Meanwhile when asked if he had a
roof over his head, Pa Ogbunemo said he had none. “I have no house to
live in.” He told Inside NigerDelta that he was living in a house behind the
Conoil Plc directly opposite his abode, the bus stop. According to him, he lost
his more comfortable abode when the owner, a woman, who had had mercy on him,
died July last year.
As an orphan with one sibling except
some of his relatives who are resident in the village, the 69-year-old Urhobo
said he was really not aware if any of his siblings was still living in
their village at Eku, near ughelli. This is because, according him, he left
home early 2000.
The thought that indolence might
have brought about his suffering may be far fetched. This is because Pa
Ogbunemo said he was a farmer who grew yam for a living and commercial
purposes. He disclosed that he came to Warri to seek greener pastures, but even
at that, he could not rent a house.
How does he fend for himself? Pa
Ogbunemo does not beg as others do. While enjoying some goodwill from
well wishers in kind and cash, he does his cooking right inside the bus
stop-turned residential quarters. “ People usually give me money. I eat any
kind of food I see; I sometimes buy, “ he noted. The haggard-looking old man
added: “ If I hungry, I buy Gesher, buy some raps of fufu and use the can fish
and its stew to eat it or sometimes I buy bread and eat it with groundnut
and go to sleep.”
As earlier stated, the old an looks
like a mad man from a distance, but this is not true. While engrossed in the
discussion with this reporter, passersby could not come to terms with the way
the man was responding to questions so intelligently and with a sound mind. He
betrayed no sign of psychiatric imbalance; he looked more like a victim of the
harsh economic and political weather of the country. He is no doubt one out of
thousands of Nigerians wantonly stagnated, neglected and traumatized by
unfriendly economic policies.
Unlike several other bus stops
dotting Warri/Sapele Road, territorially conquered by youthful but mentally
challenged individuals, the abode of Pa Ogbonemo often plays host to other
mentally challenged loafers. Beside his corner are some luggage meant for some
other lunatics who, due to exhaustion from walking the length and breadth of
the ancient town, stop over to take some rest, sometimes even naps.
When asked to comment on how he
thought people viewed him at the bus stop, Pa Ogbunemo had this to say:
“They look at me anyhow; this does not really concern me; whether they think I
am mad or not is their problem, not mine. Everybody has their own life, so
anybody can laugh at me, but nobody knows tomorrow.”
The present cold in Warri is
excruciatingly taking its toll on the man at the bus stop. While speaking with
the old man, his breath was heavy. Often he jerked, coughed and sneezed .
Although an addict of alcohol and tobacco at a time, Pa Ogbunemo now lives a
clean life only with a longing to have it blissful at twilight.
Pa Ogbunemo’s life is ebbing away
into the parlous precipice, but he could be salvaged by well-meaning Nigerians.
With old people’s homes being hard to come by in this clime, who bells the cat?
He craved a helping hand from the compassionate governor of the state, Dr
Emmanuel Uduaghan.
“If I can see the governor, I will
ask him to help me; I heard he is very kind and compassionate. I need a home,
who knows if I can still have a family of my own? I still fit born now if I get
wife,” Pa Ogbunemo stated amid laughter.
Born in the month of August,
believed to be a metaphor of ‘a new beginning’, the hopeful Ogbunemo needs a
new beginning to have a taste of the sunny side of life from kind hearted
Nigerians.
Source: http://www.tribune.com.ng
My very first question runs thus: doesn't he has a FAMILY and or RELATIVES?
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