Stella Dimoko Korkus.com: Nigerian Lady Tells Nigerians In The Diaspora To Stop Shipping Their Children Back To Africa And Explains Why...

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Sunday, May 29, 2022

Nigerian Lady Tells Nigerians In The Diaspora To Stop Shipping Their Children Back To Africa And Explains Why...

This is a must read for any Parent(s).....










SENDING OUR CHILDREN BACK TO NIGERIA OR AFRICA TO LEARN OUR CULTURES AND TRADITIONS IS A VERY BAD IDEA.


Unless you are unwell, and have no one else to help you here while you recover, social services cannot provide the children with respite and you have good well adjusted true disciplinarians like my late grandmother at home to look after the children, don't do it.


It is the most emotionally distabilising and destructive harm you can cause a child.


Although, I could not have had any better upbringing than I did, God bless my gran, not having a relationship with my birth mum, remains something that troubles my spirit most, not sometimes, and the reason why I hold my own children and grandchildren tight to my chest.


Until you are me, you will never know the harm your idea of working round the clock to become rich while neglecting your children and eventually shipping them off to Nigeria or Africa can cause your children.


Until my mother died, I knew, but did not know her enough.

To me, she just had the title, mother, and I must respect and love, or be seen to love and respect her unconditionally because she gave me life.

I was not sure if she genuinely loved me, and if I did too.

I saw a post by another sister celebrating her mother posthumously, and my heart and mind skipped a bit.

I do not think that I have ever done that for my birth mother since she died, and even while she was here. Again, I became sad. She deserves the best from me.

I do not remember my mother's birthday or the anniversary of her death. I occasionally think about her with love, pity and sometimes, anger, disappointment and frustration.


Many emotions run through my mind. Many questions needing answers, but never asked and will remain unanswered forever. Don't do this to any child.

Then the many, "what ifs" begin to hold me hostage to their tricks and I feel helpless, hopeless and depressed again.
I try to understand that my parents had no choice in their days and what they did was the best for them and us.


Then, I begin to feel better and thankful that they did not abandon me somewhere, and as many troubled children, I may be today looking to find out who I am.

The many beautiful people in the long lost family programme are on my mind right now.

I sometimes wonder whether my gratitude to my parents for not abandoning me as many of their parents did, is the reason why I watch that programme.

Whatever may be going on in your lives as parents in Diaspora, please stop shipping your children off to Africa. Love and cherish them by being there for them in your own little ways. Don't obstruct their access to them by their non resident parents too .


That is a very bad thing to do. Until you are me, you will never know why this hurting soul sings love for all as the only basis for my existence.


Think children first.


Although the environment can affect the way children turn out if parents are not lovingly, tough, rough and rugged like my gran and I, our children are what, and who we nurture them to become.

Think before you start having children. Plan for them.

Don't just have them because you can or are getting too old and the biological clock is ticking, you want to escape poverty and some angel turns up bearing visa to abroad or you love someone and they won't commit, so you want to tie them down with a child or children.


That is very dangerous and may be the source of your downfall one day.


Again, if you become a single parent by choice or accident and feel overwhelmed, thinking that it's a reason to fail yourself and the children or blame living in a council estate, ask yourself why other parents like you succeeded and continue to succeed but you are failing yourself and your children.


Children first please. Ask for help if you need it.



by Jenny Chika Okafor
from facebook

60 comments:

  1. I don't necessarily agree with her,

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  2. Same applies to some children that are shipped off to boarding school immediately after primary. Not every child has the mental capacity to be away from their parents, it makes them feel you sent them away to face the world alone even if they dont say it to you, and it will affect your relationship with such a child later, cos you consciously broke that emotional attachment.

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    Replies
    1. Very true

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    2. Nothing is wrong with boarding school abeg. It helps the kids focus and mature. Just ensure you check up on them from time to time, ask them questions, know their friends, ensure they have a guardian who checks up on them, a trusted teacher in the school preferably) most importantly, pray for them always

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  3. So what exactly is her reason for saying this. She didn’t say anything

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    1. How can I like your comment please…my exact thought after reading the piece. Infact, she negated herself when she said she was grateful to her parents for not abandoning her, yet she doesn’t have a connection with her mother. I quite understand what she is saying, but she didn’t put it well into writing.

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    2. Please ask again? What's her reasons ?

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    3. Anon 15:47 at least you understand what she is saying. You're intelligent o.

      Me, I cannot make head or tail of her write up.

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    4. What do you guys mean by saying she did not say anything. With all that she said you still don't understand. Na wah for una oo.

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    5. Not everyone has green fingers. But I think she was also I her emotions. So let her, plix

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  4. Parents that abandon their children have mind walahi. Even leaving my daughter to go to work atimes gives me anxiety. I can't imagine not seeing her in 24hrs i would practically go gaga. I love so much and she knows it.

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    Replies
    1. At some point you have to leave them, you wouldn't want a clingy dependent 20year old...

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    2. Or an apron string tied 40yr old

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    3. That's not you loving your kid, Hope you don't turn around to complain later in life

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    4. I agree with you. They really have mind.

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  5. It’s so annoying the way they send children they fail to train to boarding schools here in Nigeria. Like you can’t train them, it’s teachers that will train them for you, right?

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  6. Someone should summarize, because I read it twice.

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    Replies
    1. Don't bother it made no sense

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  7. But this writer succeeded in saying Nothing

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    Replies
    1. Read well, she said a lot actually

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    2. Gbam! @ anon 15:16, I thought I was the only one that felt like this.

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    3. But she said a lot. Is it English that you people don't understand. Ha ha what is so hard to understand here. Don't send your children away for another person to take care of. Be with your children any where you are. Don't birth children you don't have good plans for. What is hard to understand. If you are a good mother you will understand this easily.

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  8. Everyone is entitled to their opinions

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  9. Shipping kids to Nigeria is no longer common in our generation as it was in the nineties and two thousands. I think parents did that mostly for the kids to learn the culture, and some doing it now is mostly for cost. Monthly cost of daycare here is $2000-$4000...

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  10. I will relocate to Nigeria with my children once I am more stable, why else did I work so hard to accumulate. They will have the best of both worlds, but I can never leave them alone any longer than a few days.

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    Replies
    1. 15.55 same here

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    2. Me too ooo. I cannot send my children anywhere. I will move to Nigeria at some point with my children. Where i go they go. I am the 1 constant they have had all their lives.

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    3. Beautiful!!!
      Awwwwwwwww FemiliciousπŸ₯°πŸ˜πŸ₯°

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  11. My brother is also using the school to train his kids because he’s too busy!!! Most damaged adults today were caused by parents. God bless you Jenny for this beautiful piece only those with a working brain will get this

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    Replies
    1. Your last sentence was unnecessary. That It was expository to you and pointless to others doesn't make them brainless. A coin has two sides remember?

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    2. 16.50 πŸ‘Œ I don't know what it is with some people and condescending statements. It reflects more on you than the people you are trying to shade.

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    3. It was a mostly incoherent write up that needed a lot more patience than necessary to kinda get what she was saying. Maybe it takes some one of like inclination to understand our appreciate the beauty of the piece....

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    4. I guess I can proudly say I don't have a working brain, despite all my certificates!
      Lol

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  12. My sister did it and she has no regrets.

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    Replies
    1. Sister has no regret but what about the kids? Dis they ever ask them about what and how they feel about shipping them out alone in this world. πŸ™„

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  13. I no pick anything from this story sha.. She just dey beg us, but she no tell us why.

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  14. What is she talking about? No reason no Point. Do people still do that with the high level of insecurity every where? I relocated with my children to UK, leaving husband in Nigeria, not intentional but it's hard work. Kids are growing now,and I come home more frequently unlike years ago. It's all about discipline and sacrifices

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    Replies
    1. who did you leave your husband for to perform wifely dutie? hope you won't cry tomorrow if he marries a new wife

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  15. I can completely understand this lady’s point of view. My parents were there physically but were not emotionally there for us growing up. They were all about church activities a lot of times. When they’re home, no form of affection, we just talk normally as per our parents. The emotional neglect affected us especially me. And today we’re not really close but I do respect and love them as my parents. No parents to child relationship though.

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    Replies
    1. You are me and I am you. When I look back, I can truly say I am a living testimony.

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  16. Sometimes used to widen the perspective of an ignorant child or teenager

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  17. Our grand parents raised us all cos our parents had to work. We spoke with them regularly, travel to see them on holidays and guess what? We all turned out well.

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  18. Different stokes. My Aunt did it and according to her daughter it was the best thing that happened to her and her self esteem. She was being bullied in school by racists over there and she said then she absolutely hated her skin color as it was in the minority. But coming to Nigeria and seeing so many people in a “community” with her skin color birthed a light within her. She also said she really Enjoyed been doted on by her school mates and teachers as per the Americana amongst them unlike the discrimination she endured in US. She said she made real friends too over here and life was really so simple and happy for her. She told me it was the best years of her life. She didn’t constantly have to worry about race and working hard in schoo Because she hard to prove she was equally smart even though she was black, she just studied like everyone else and passed with flying colors wmhile loving every bit of it.

    Sadly after secondary school her grandmother died and they couldn’t stay anymore they all returned. Last time I spoke with her she told me how much she missed Nigeria and the food. Also the freedom of moving around. In America she hardly goes out because “there are guns everywhere”.

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    Replies
    1. @Yvonne, why don't you tell her to relocate to Nigeria, after all she is Nigerian too . She will have more freedom here in Nigeria to move around without the fear of 'guns'....as Nigeria is in every way better than the US as regards security and gun crimes.

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    2. Ahhh I disagree with the last part you wrote. You absolutely added that to your story. I live in America and I move more freely than when I came to Nigeria to visit!! Just because there’s gun violence issues here doesn’t mean we don’t move freely. It doesn’t happen everywhere just like armed robbery doesn’t happen everywhere in Nigeria!!! I can go out at 2am here and come back anytime. I can travel at night time without any issues. We should all just pray for God’s protection where ever we go because sin don mess up the world! The world is not a perfect place in any country!!!

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    3. You disagree, fine, but for you to say she added it is ridiculous.

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    4. Anon 23:24 I “absolutely added that to my story “ to achieve what exactly?
      Hope you know you can choose to ignore my comment or argue intelligently too without sounding silly.

      Delete
  19. She hardly goes out in America because “there are many guns”? That is an inaccurate portrayal of suburban life in the US but may offer an insight into why she was sent to Nigeria. Insecurity is rife in urban ghettoes. I understand many immigrants not wanting to raise kids in the inner cities & ghettoes with gangs and drugs.

    However many here do not live in the ghetto, the “going out” culture is an American culture, one of its exports with Hollywood and the rest. There are more cinemas, malls, restaurants, public parks, golf courses etc in the US suburbs than in any nation on earth. As a suburban dweller we don’t even remember to lock our front door or garage doors even while on trips and nobody enters our home. Most subs are safe, you can check the crime statistics of every town online by the number of violent crimes of all types. Police sheriffs are local and chiefs are elected. Is it perfect? No. It’s not utopia but there are consequences & crime is prosecuted here as opposed to Nigeria where the kaduna train kidnap perpetrators dare to be threatening with nobody trying to arrest them & rescue victims after 2 months talk less of prosecuting them! Let’s face the realities of a society descending into anarchy & not compare it to structured developed societies. Self deception is the worst form. Nigeria is descending into anarchy. Delegates collecting bribes openly? Governors’ wife bribing state officials openly. No consequences to kidnappings & murders? That should worry every one of us!

    Self esteem for black kids is deliberately built here by creating a circle of ambitious blacks around them in the subs and raising them in a healthy home. Many forget that “Diaspora Nigerians” left because of the failure of the state. People used to return after studying abroad up until the 80s. The failure of the Nigerian state is why many are here in subzero weather. Some tried to help fix it. Many mock Banky W for contesting forgetting he HAS a choice as an American. That’s how we shut out elders like late Achebe, Fawehinmi, Soyinka etc up. Now there are few genuine social critics & a messed up nation with Cyberbullying & vigilante “Justice” where some blogger helped force the wicked state to free an unjustly detained man but is publishing personal phone numbers of relatives of people in what is fast becoming a troubling norm.

    Sending kids to be raised by anyone else is damaging to many kids regardless of who you send them to. I’m not sure people still send their kids from here to learn the culture. There are schools here that teach many of our languages & culture and many parents read of the incessant kidnappings without consequences. Yes the US has more guns in wrong hands than senses sadly but it’s a huge federation with different laws in different states which is different from the unitary system in Nigeria where laws are forced on states from the center. Sending kids to boarding schools is the same. Her write-up is from a place of emotional pain having being raised by her grandmother. Entertainment is an integral part of the social justice movement here. I wish it could be like that in Nigeria as opposed to majoring on the minors. Many do not know how vested JayZ, BeyoncΓ© etc are in the community copying superficial things about them. Oprah sent 160000+ people to school! It’s on YouTube. We all need to get involved to make things better!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Do you madam!
      Yvonne's aunt chose what she chose, and she is very much entitled to her choice without an epistle from a stranger.

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    2. 20:36 thank you!! I just responded to her comment as well. I’m like what the hell is she talking about??? You thoroughly explained my thoughts. There will always be a ghetto sides in any country. We live in a peaceful neighborhood and most times we don’t even lock our doors. Mail man drops packages and you can live it there for days and no one will take it. In fact, thank you for your explanation.

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    3. @20:36 Gbam Gbam Gbam. You nailed it. Thank you.

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    4. πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ 20:36. I didn't want your comment to end.

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    5. *having been raised

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  20. Madam, I get your point but right now, most people are just desperate to leave. Many don't even have a real plan on what happens when they land. Such exchange programmes thus become inevitable due to financial and cultural reasons. Living amongst knife wielding teens and near schools that are a career dead end would warrant such decisions. African immigrants must learn how to make the best of their new location without fractioning their families. Yeah, you have a child who may speak your language but what about the vices you ran from? What about the necessary network your children need for their professional lives?

    Speak your language to your children and show them your culture instead of outsourcing the job of you and your spouse. Buy your own house in better communities instead of sending money home to a bush that cannot financially propel your children and portfolio to the next level. Want far better for your children and don't make it their duty to do your part. Indians, Latinos, Pakistani and other races do it successfully. African parents should realize that their kids deserve better and have a voice.

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  21. I would prefer she spoke English. The title is more explanatory than the message

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  22. Na oga adviser.

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  23. Her point is not valid. I know many kids who were shipped back, they got better and got more information about their countries and felt a sense of community and belonging. In all, just show your kids love when they're young, especially before shipping them off to anywhere in the world.

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    Replies
    1. Just because you know many kids who were shipped back doesn’t mean her point is not valid. Everyone reacts differently to different situations. So please stop. Ps: if you ship kids away in their formative years when they need that emotional security, it’ll definitely affect them! You can’t compare that to kids that are past that age. They tend to adapt better. This poster was shipped to naija at a young age.

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