Tag: Amina

  • ‘Why we pulled down Queen Amina’

    ‘Why we pulled down Queen Amina’

    Gradually, the National Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos, is taking a new shape. The level of renovation, although slow and steady is producing the desired results. Edozie Udeze had a chat with the General Manager of the Theatre, Professor Sunday Ododo who explained why some old structures in the premises, including the Queen Amina statue, had to give way for a more modern national monument.

    From the look of things, it seems that the National Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos, is undergoing total overhaul. In the beginning it appeared that it was only the interiors- the cinema halls, the VIP lounge, the main bowl and other dilapidated facilities that were to be renovated. However, as it is now not only the inside of this monumental edifice that are undergoing restructuring, but the outside of it as well. The lawns and gardens are also being redesigned. The Amina statue in front of the Theatre and some other structures, have been demolished. The main entrance where the Amina statue once stood has been dismantled; with new gardens designed for beautification.

    As you approach the main Theatre, all you see are workmen busy at work erecting new structures, mounting entirely new barricades, all in an attempt to ensure that the outlook of the Theatre this time around conforms to modernity. It all gives this sense of allurement, a sense of beauty as the works still remain in their staccato and embryonic stages. On hand however to throw more light on these stages of development is the General Manager of the Theatre, Professor Sunday Ododo. In an interview, he said “You can see that the level of progress here is fantastic. Excellence is the watchword and I think that is what they have in mind as you can see. The handlers want to get it very right. They do not want to do a shoddy job. Most of the installations they are using are not inferior. They are all imported. So ferrying them, clearing them and the importation itself and the rest are part of the delay. But then work is ongoing, progressing stage by stage. Indeed so much has gone in, so much.

    “Yes the only statue that has been removed is the Queen Amina statue. It has been removed for greater impact. It is going to be replaced with something better, something more befitting. Of course the environmental aesthetics is undergoing innovation. The horticulture, the gardens and so on are going to be altered somewhat to give it a new and more modern outlook. All the road works and some pathways have been tarred for greater impact”.

    Read Also: Group petitions ICPC, calls for suspension of national theatre boss over alleged corruption

    The edifice would have been handed over to the federal government of Nigeria by last April. That did not happen due to the delays. But the GM was quick to explain why. “You cannot hand over an uncompleted project. The delay is part of ensuring we get it right this time around. The level of work done so far is insufficient and morality comes in. Will you now say because of the assigned date of hand over, you hand over an uncompleted edifice? As long as work is ongoing and you can see the progress is steady and good, we will continue to work at it until the whole project is done”.

    Concerning the National Theatre sit-out known as Abe igi which is now devoid of its many trees and faunas but now wears a modern look, Ododo screamed “Oh that place is fantastic now. It looks good. There will be trees around it later. We will plan some to compliment the environment. We hope to do so and we will do it. But for now don’t you like how well and inviting the place looks? Abe igi came to be because of the way it started. For this, abe igi became a natural name for it. And there is no other name to call it to alter the igi. Yes the igi was there. People were taking shelter under the igi. Now, is the shelter gone? No it has not. What we did is to modernize the igi. That is the basic concept and idea of it all”, he said rocking with laughter.

    For indeed, apart from looking cozier now, abe igi hitherto the melting point of entertainers, and visitors to the Theatre has been the busiest spot at the Theatre. Ododo’s joy is that the modernization of abe igi tends to help increase the volume of business there. Branded over time by the Nigerian Breweries but run and managed by the Theatre, abe igi is always and almost ceaselessly a beehive of activities. It is where thespians, fun seekers, visitors, workers and more, usually hang out as often as time calls for it. Abe igi is synonymous with the ideals that form the National Theatre. From inception it had been there and will continue to remain for a long time to come. Most visitors to the Theatre more often end up at abe igi without necessarily touching their legs inside the main building. That is the allure and powers that abe igi commands.

    In fact over time the business sense exhibited at abe igi has helped to double the attractiveness of the Theatre. There people, whether big or small, young or old, poor or rich, known or known converge to have fun-pepper soup, all sorts of drinks and menus, name it, are always available. Abe igi is where you can easily meet any of the Nollywood stars. Some of them meet there for their meetings or rehearsals and auditioning. Some people have their town union meetings there too. This makes abe igi a magic place and this was why its total renovation was imperative to Ododo and his team.

  • Jigawa governor’s daughter welcomes first baby

    ABOUT a year after their high octane wedding brought the ancient city of Kano to a standstill, Amina, daughter of Jigawa State governor, and her beau, Lawan Dahiru Mangal, once again have cause to celebrate. The beautiful daughter of Governor Muhammad Badaru Abubakar gave birth to her new bundle of joy a few days ago, and she and her husband have not stopped sharing the good news with all and sundry.

    Of the two, Amina has the most cause to be happy as the new baby represents her baptism into motherhood. And what a baptism it was! She has been flooding her social media pages with pictures of the cute baby boy. The equally joyous father, on the other hand, has had several children with his first wife.

    It will be recalled that Lawan and Amina tied the nuptial knot in a fancy ceremony at Umar Khattab Mosque in Kano. The wedding attracted the cream of high society spanning the political and business worlds.

  • AMINA and the other girls

    AMINA and the other girls

    IN a haze of official denial surrounding movement of captured Boko Haram insurgents in the opposite direction, 21 of the Chibok schoolgirls last Thursday returned to safety. They were, as widely feared after more than two years in captivity, a shadow of their youthful selves.

    While one of the girls cradled a baby, sources alleged that as much as 18 of the group could be nursing mothers.

    The girls were part of the 276 pupils abducted by extremists from the Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State on April 14, 2014 while they stayed to write final year examinations. The abduction sparked outrage and prompted global figures, including activist Malala Yousafzai and US first lady, Michelle Obama, to support the campaign #BringBackOurGirls.

    After the insurgents stormed and firebombed the school and seized the girls, dozens escaped within hours but 219 remained missing until recently. While some of the ones that managed to get away have since benefited from scholarship opportunities at home and abroad, others, mainly through their minders, have complained of neglect and unfulfilled pledges.

    The government denied a swap arrangement on the latest release but reports indicated that the girls were traded with four detained Boko Haram fighters at the Borno border town Banki. The Minister of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed said: “That is not true. If you listen, I said this particular release is significant because it is a first step in what we believe will lead to the eventual release of all our girls in custody. And it is significant also because we have been able to establish ever than before a kind of confidence in the core leadership of Boko Haram and Nigerians.  And I am not aware of any monetary transactions.”

    The government would not relent until the remaining girls regained freedom, he pledged.

    The release of the girls coincided with the start of President Muhammadu Buhari’s three-day trip to Germany to discuss assistance for rebuilding of the Boko Haram-ravaged northeast. The president said that the release underscored his determination to secure all Nigerians wherever they might be.

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo visited the girls and the baby at the Directorate of State Services (DSS) medical facility in Abuja after they were brought to the Federal Capital Territory. Borno State governor, Kashim Shetima, thought the girls’ return heralded greater news. He expressed gratitude to the president for the efforts made so far, hoping that the rest of the girls would be rescued alive.

    Former Minister of Education and leading voice on the global #Bring Back Our Girls campaign, #BBOG, Oby Ezekwesili, expressed gratitude to God and thanked the president and gallant Nigerian soldiers. Ezekwesili, on the social media, admitted a mix of emotions.

    A common thread runs through the captives’ narrative. Many endured sex abuse in the sect’s Sambisa Forest enclave and arrived makeshift army and government camps starving and traumatised after trekking through the bush for days.

    Shortsightedness in policy making and a weakened military under Goodluck Jonathan administration, in the opinion of many, heightened insurgency and his 2015 presidential election defeat. While thousands of girls, boys and young women are estimated to have been kidnapped in a seven-year-old insurgency that claimed over 20,000 lives in and around Nigeria’s borders, the military has reportedly freed thousands following Buhari’s emergence and a reinvigorated military operation.

    Deriving from the casualty figures as well as the combined effect of official neglect and societal permissiveness, however, Boko Haram may have assumed the reputation of being the deadliest terror organisation on the planet, perhaps more than the Islamic State. Through the coercive methods of murder and rape, the sect is believed to have forced 10 to 12-year-old girls to strap on explosives for deadly suicide bomb attacks.

    Where Jonathan’s allegedly corrupt and intimidated force skirted the Boko Haram stronghold of Sambisa Forest, their contemporaries, assisted by the local vigilante group called Civilian JTF, force the bedraggled opposition to the recesses of the sprawling game reserve from where they launch occasional guerrilla attacks.

    The first of the girls to be liberated from the fortress, Amina Ali Nkeki, was in May, 2016 brought to the village for identification. She was rescued in Bale village at the edge of the Sambisa forest by the Civilian JTF after fierce fighting with insurgents.

    Witnesses instantly recognised the girl and sent for her mother. Mother and daughter rushed into an embrace. Seventeen at the time of her abduction, the 19-year-old was ‘married’ to a Boko Haram fighter and bore his four-month-old child, it emerged.

    Her father died of trauma while she was in captivity. Six other parents also died of the same condition.

    In tears, Amina reportedly told of schoolmates languishing in Sambisa forest while six had died. They were ‘well secured and protected’ to stop the Nigerian Army from rescuing them, she said.

    A doctor from Chibok, Idriss Danladi, who treated beleaguered parents of the abducted girls, threw in a dampener. Amina was pregnant again.

    Her rescue, however, raised hopes in Chibok and across the country that some of the famous girls lived in spite of their infamous captors.

    James Bako, an opinion leader in Chibok, who was one of the first to see the rescued girl, said she escaped from the Sambisa Forest together with her ‘husband’ as a result of ground and aerial offensive by Nigerian security forces.

    He said that the girl claimed that she was forcefully married off to the man, Mohammed Hayado, whom she said was equally abducted, conscripted and told to fight for the insurgents.

    Three months after her escape, Amina pined for her rebel husband. Held hostage by the terrorist group for more than two years, she said she was married off a year into her ordeal and later had a baby girl, Safiya. Found on the outskirts of Nigeria’s Sambisa Forest, the couple fled the camp by themselves, and was not rescued by the Nigerian military, contrary to reports.

    For a year after they were taken, the abducted girls were kept together, Amina said. Some of the teenagers were then ‘given’ to the terrorists as wives.

    Twenty-one-year-old Tabitha Adamu, one of the women freed from the sect’s camp but not originally of the group of kidnapped Chibok girls, said the Chibok girls had turned to Boko Haram fighters (for protection). Expectant for one of the sect’s commanders who forcibly married her, Tabitha said she mingled with the girls at various times in the sect’s camp.

    The chairman of Chibok community in Abuja, Tsamdo Hosea Abana, also confirmed that one of the girls released by the insurgents, Susan Ishaya, to be pregnant. Abana bemoaned the trauma experienced by parents and the abducted girls.

    Security sources said Miss Ishaya was found near a police station in the border town of Mubi after she was left there by the insurgents. Abana confirmed that Miss Ishaya was among the schoolgirls abducted by the insurgent group in Chibok, Borno State.

    While the war against insurgency nears closure, the plight of the rescued girls, especially of the Chibok group, opens a new vista. Besides the challenge of catering to pregnant and lactating mothers are resettlement and re-absorption of the affected into a critical society.

  • Chibok girl Amina for rehab

    Chibok girl Amina for rehab

    •Sarah Luka too

    Mohammad Hayyatu, the self-acclaimed husband of a rescued Chibok girl, Amina Ali Nkeki, has been taken into military custody for interrogation, The Nation learnt yesterday.

    The young mother will be sent to a special rehabilitation centre.

    Hayyatu is being treated as a suspected Boko Haram terrorist. Intelligence officers have been grilling him.

    Hayyatu might be separated with Amina and her baby for life if he is found culpable of dastardly conduct as a Boko Haram “commander”.

    For security reasons, the 19-year old Amina will be put in a rehabilitation facility with her mother to enable her take care of her baby.

    It was gathered that a rehabilitation facility has been built for strategic victims of Boko Haram, especially the Chibok girls.

    A top military source said: “Hayyatu is being treated as a Boko Haram commander and he is being interrogated at a military facility. He is a suspected insurgent and if he is culpable of all these atrocities, he will face trial accordingly.

    “The military has detained him for profiling by the Intelligence Unit. He can be released only if at the end of the day he is innocent.

    “With this development, there is no opportunity of reuniting with Amina or the baby.”

    On the girl from GSS Chibok, Sarah Luka, the military source said: “Once we rescue Boko Haram victims, we hand them over to relevant civil authorities and agencies. She will also undergo a rehabilitation process like Amina.”

    Amina will be put in a designated rehabilitation facility alongside her mother.

    Another source said: “For security reasons, we will relocate Amina and the mother to a safe rehabilitation facility which has been created by the government. I cannot tell you whether this rehabilitation facility is in Abuja or Maiduguri.

    “What is important is that they will be put in a facility where Amina can be psychologically secured and under the guidance of her mother because she is a kid-mother. The facility will enable her to raise her child under the care of her mum.

    “We have to work on her psyche to forget about this forceful marriage, the trauma in Sambisa Forest and to allow her to think of how to go back to school for a brighter future.”

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday assured Amina of the best medical and emotional care.

    He said: “Although, we cannot do anything to reverse the horrors of her past, the Federal Government can and will do everything possible to ensure that the rest of her life takes a completely different course.

    “Amina will get the best care that the Nigerian government can afford. We will ensure that she gets the best medical, emotional and whatever care that she requires to get full recovery and be integrated into the society.”

  • Army takes custody of Amina, DIA probes clues

    Army takes custody of Amina, DIA probes clues

    The military has taken custody of one of the abducted Chibok girls, Amina Ali Darsha Nkeki, who was found around the Sambisa forest.

    The 19-year old girl, now a mother, is in protective custody in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    Besides, the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) has started profiling the girl and probing clues on her stay in Sambisa forest and other clues which could assist in locating the other girls.

    A military source said: “The girl, Amina Ali Darsha Nkeki, has been transferred to a military facility in Maiduguri for profiling and investigation of how she lived in Sambisa Forest and her eventual escape.

    “She is likely to spend some days with the military for debriefing before rehabilitation and reintegration process is put in place for her.

    “Her freedom will certainly assist in getting more clues on the fate of other girls in Boko Haram custody.”

    The Army last night said Amina was in the company of a suspected Boko Haram terrorist, Mohammed Hayatu, who claimed to be her husband.

    The Army said the girl has a four-month old baby.

    A statement by the Acting Director of Army Public Relations, Col. Sani Kukasheka Usman, said: “Please recall that we informed you that one of the abducted Chibok school girls has been rescued earlier today and promised to give further details.

    “Further to that, in continuation of Operation CRACKDOWN, troops of 25 Brigade Damboa in conjunction with Civilian JTF deployed in one of the blocking positions at Baale, near Damboa, rescued one Miss Amina Ali and a suspected Boko Haram terrorist, Mohammed Hayatu, who claimed to be her husband.

    “Both were brought to Headquarters 25 Task Force Brigade Damboa at about 2.30pm today.   Preliminary investigation shows that she is indeed one of the abducted Chibok School girls abducted by Boko Haram terrorists on 14th April 2014 in Chibok and her name is Amina Ali as against Falmata Mbalala that was earlier stated.

    “In addition, she is a nursing mother with a four month old baby girl who was named Safiya. Both the suspected Boko Haram terrorist and the nursing mother have been taken to Maiduguri for further medical attention and screening.”

  • Turunku: Queen Amina’s forgotten hometown

    Turunku: Queen Amina’s forgotten hometown

    Of all the neglected sites in Kaduna State, Queen Amina’s hometown, Turunku, is probably the most painful. Centuries after her reign and exploits, the warrior queen continues to stir the mind. Primary school pupils study her as much as researchers probe into her intriguing war past. Today, the queen who mastered the art of warfare on horse back, humbling one community after another, is regarded as one of Africa’s greatest women.

    Shouldn’t her birthplace, Turunku, therefore be a money spinner, an irresistible destination for tourists? But successive governments in the state have routinely looked away from the town, leaving it an ungainly settlement.

    The neglect of Turunku is almost as legendary as its illustrious heroine. First, she was always called Queen Amina of Zaria though she never really lived in the town, which was named after her younger sister. Also, many do not know that the Zazzau emirate did not originally start from its present location, but at Turunku in present-day Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State.

    What does all that fetch Turunku and its residents? It seems pretty little. The town which would have been generating huge revenues for the state government has been abandoned. The only sign of government’s presence there is the fence round the tomb of Queen Amina’s father. Worse, the fact that the famous warrior queen and her people ever reigned in Turunku may never be known to future generations, due to lack of efforts to protect and promote the site.

    When The Nation visited the tomb of Queen Amina’s father in Turunku, it was covered with weed, even though it was fenced by the government. It was clear that few visitors or tourists will be attracted to the place. Also, the tie and dye wells (known as ‘Rijiyan Rini’ in Hausa) which were used by Queen Amina and her people were also covered by grass, while farmers have taken over the entire area leaving little space by the Turunku-Farakwai roadside. There is nothing to indicate that such a warrior ever passed through the place, let alone reign there.

    When The Nation visited, it was discovered that the villagers had made their own arrangement to conduct would be visitors round the remaining sites, which included the mountain where Queen Amina is said to have lived.

    It was also discovered that there is no designated route to the top of the mountain, but the tour guide attached to this reporter disclosed that there was an easy route to the top. It was an interesting, but scary expedition. At the base of the rocky mountain was the game board used by Queen Amina and her people  to relax. There is also a big, flat rock with several holes, which they used to play the game known today as ‘ayo’.

    Also close to it is what is known as ‘Zakzak’, where Bakwa, Amina’s father from whom she learnt the art of warfare is believed to have buried his sword. It is believed that Bakwa never went beyond this point whenever he saw his visitors off.

    There is also the ‘Dutsen Hiya’ and ‘Dutsen Boyewa. While Dutsen Hiya is said to be the place where she prayed for victory before she went to battle, Dutsen Boyewa is a covering for an underground tunnel where they hid their children during war.

    While these sites still exist, there is no effort to protect them from extinction.

    At the top of the mountain is the rock bed used by Queen Amina and her bodyguards.

    However, while it was noticed that the rock bed was much wider than beds used in those days, the tour guide, Abubakar, told The Nation that people of Queen Amina’s generation were 10 times bigger than their modern counterparts.

    She was the chief protector of her community and this is evident by the placement of her stool located at the northern entrance to her community regarded as Kofar Arewa and another located in the southern entrance to the community known as Kofar Kudu. From these seats, she could see an enemy coming several kilometres away. A big grinding stone said to have been used by the community also sits on top of the mountain. There is also a well to provide water and a poison mortar used to prepare poison for their arrows when preparing for war.

    One interesting discovery was a big hole said to be snake hole in the rock where a big snake is said to have lived for over 100 years. Even though the snake could not be seen, a strange odour which was said to be its breath welcomes visitors to the place. Abubakar told The Nation that the snake usually came out every Sunday and that it stopped coming out since a visiting journalist took its photograph some years back.

    The mention of the giant snake sent jitters down the spine of this reporter and the tour was brought to an abrupt end, but that was not before Abubakar disclosed that there was nothing else to be seen.

    After about three hours journey to and from the seat of Queen Amina, the traditional ruler of Turunku, Alhaji Ahmed Abdullahi told The Nation that if the government had taken serious interest in the sites, climbing the mountains would have been made easier.

    He described Queen Amina as a very successful warrior, saying she always took her war booty to her sister’s settlement in Zaria. He added that over a period of time, her many conquests and subsequent annexation of territories extended beyond the borders of Zaria.

    One of the tour guides who gave his name simply as Ahmed told The Nation that Queen Amina was never married and had no children of her own. He noted that instead of having a husband of her own, the brave Amina always took a temporary mate from the legions of vanquished foes after every battle, spent one night with the man and executed him the following morning to prevent him from ever speaking about his sexual encounter with her.

    Ahmed, a young school leaver who said his ambition is to document the history of Turunku, also said that the legendary “Amina committed suicide during a military campaign at Dekina in the present Kogi State and was buried in Idah”.

    According to him, Queen Amina who had a successful military exploit in Dekina took a temporary husband in the place and could not kill the man after their sexual encounter. He stressed that “a soothsayer had predicted Queen Amina’s coming to Dekina and told their ruler to bury his young daughter and a young man alive to prevent their land from being conquered by the female warrior. And that was what led to her failure to kill the man who spent a night with the warrior queen. The man, it is said, sneaked out in the middle of the night. Worried by that development, Queen Amina refused to return home. She jumped into the river and died at Dekina and was later buried at Idah.”

    Life and times of the warrior Queen

     The Nation’s findings revealed that Queen Amina took after her father as a warrior and leader of her people. Her father, known to the people simply as Bakwa was the 18th ruler of Turunku and their family wealth was derived mainly from trading in leather goods, cloth, kola, salt, horses and imported metals. It was also learnt that Amina’s younger sister, Amamatu who was also known as Zaria left Turunku because of water scarcity and settled in the present-day Zaria, a place that was later named after her.

    Amina who was said to have been born in 1533. In 1576 she became the  ruler of Zazzau.

  • How I saved  Amina Lawal

    How I saved Amina Lawal

    Hauwa Ibrahim is a Nigerian lawyer, feminist, research associate and visiting lecturer on Women’s Studies at Harvard University, United States of America. In a chat with Abdulrafiu Lawal, she talks about the journey up the ladder, and her role in the famous case of Amina Lawal woman sentenced to death for adultery by a Katsina sharia court.

     

    HAUWA Ibrahim, wearing a brown coat over a black trouser and a purple head scarf sits on a sofa in the living room of her expansive house in Sudbury, Massachusetts, United States. She crosses her legs and begins returning missed calls on her phone.

    This house is a 4-bedroom single family house built with stones. The landscape of the house mirrors her as someone who loves tranquility and all one can hear are chirps of birds perching on the trees. A tarred road in a zigzag pattern leads right to the entrance of the house standing alone in the woods. Welcome to the home of this amazon.

    Ibrahim’s story from a humble beginning to comfort underscores the importance of believing in oneself and seeing opportunities where others see failure. Growing up in a polygamous home in Hinna, a small village without electricity, pipe-borne water and good roads in Gombe, North Eastern Nigeria with her grandfather was ”fun and amazing.” Then, the most important thing in the life of a woman was marriage.

    Inspired by her mother and grandfather who instilled in her the values of hard work and determination, she says going to her sexagenarian grandfather’s farm with her sisters was all she knew. ”I remember at that age at about 6-7, we had to run after him because he was always walking fast. Our first experience on the farm, he was upset when he gave us a hoe to weed the grasses, not knowing we were removing the millet and corn.” Today, she recalls the experience with nostalgia, but then it was like a punishment.

    She said a typical day begins with the morning call to prayers by Baba Ladan. The first thing they do is to do ablution and pray as their grandfather leads the prayer most of the time. ”After prayers, we take our pot and calabash to the river to fetch water. This is because water was a big issue in the village, we have two wells but they are not sufficient for everyone.”

    In the evening, she listens to moonlight stories from her grandmother. For Ibrahim, these stories mean a lot, because they were tales of heroism, kindness and love. “These stories do have meanings and instill values in you, but you would not know it could be useful. When there is moon, the drummer in the village takes his drum and the entire village converges at the village square (Dandali). We dance off our heads and bodies and everyone is having fun. Nobody thinks of any criminal activity because you are all tired and exhausted.”

    When she is not in school, Ibrahim hawks vegetables sourced from gardens (Lambu) like oranges, mangoes, sugar cane, sweet potatoes and sell from house to house in the village. Sometimes, she and other girls go to the Birma Mountains and get firewood to sell. She said this experience shaped her life because she can function with as little as three hours of sleep.”If I have five hours, it is much more than enough. It has not changed me and has not made me go bananas. I read works of scholars on child psychology. I will tell you about a friend whose mother is a medical doctor in France. She was born in the late 1800 and lived over ninety years, died at ninety-six in the late 90s. Her mum insisted she must have nine hours of sleep, but when we met and when she saw what I was doing, she said I must be out of my mind.”

    Growing up in a male-dominated society made Ibrahim show early traces of an anti-establishment. As a custom then, most girls never went beyond primary school because they were married off to a man chosen by their parents after their first menstrual period. Though, her older sister was allowed to go to Government Secondary School, Misau. As a way of keeping the issue from nosy villagers who frown at the idea of sending a girl child to school, Ibrahim’s mother told them she was staying with her parents in Bukuru, Jos which was far away from Hinna. In her case, she completed her primary school but her mother opposed her going to secondary school after gaining admission to Women Teachers College, Azare. This school was ranked among the lowest in Northern Nigeria because the highest were the federal government colleges and then Queen’s College.

    Now you want to know the reason why her mother felt she could not be trusted and she answers this way: ”You know the honour of the family is on the girl child. So any dishonour the girl brings to the family will ruin it by getting pregnant outside wedlock. And the sign of playing with young boys and cars are signs that I may be the one to bring disgrace to the family.”

    Undeterred by threats from her mother to disown her, Ibrahim ran away to the school in Azare with profits made from selling vegetables and fire wood. ”I took a rickety truck conveying goods called ”Bolekaja”. I was sat on top of goods. I knew how to get to Gombe. It took more than twenty-four hours and I remember that we slept somewhere and then the following day, we arrived in Azare. You know I did not have money for taxi or bus. I got to Azare accidentally. During our time, you go to the Vice Principal’s office and you get free uniform, shoes, socks and two sets of house clothes. The only thing I had was a mat. I am not sure I had a bucket.”

    Ibrahim never knew what education could do to her life though she desired it. Aware of the consequences of her actions, Ibrahim moved to the house of her uncle, Musa Garba, for the first semester break. Succour came her way a year later when a family meeting was summoned where she begged for forgiveness from her mother. Ibrahim’s mother reluctantly accepted her plea but with a caveat not to disgrace the family.

    Crossing this hurdle was not the end of her challenges, because going to college for Ibrahim turned out to be more difficult. ”My getting educated and reading law was accidental, but, I recall my mother all the time saying her life would have been better if she was educated.”

    Now living with her older sister in the city who was married to a graduate, she saw the commissioner for women affairs on television talking about opportunities for girl child education and desired meeting her. ”I managed to see her after several attempts but she told me I may not get into college because my English was bad,” she says.

    Ibrahim was eventually admitted into the university on two grounds, namely, coming from an educationally disadvantaged community and encouraging girl child education.

    Her first year was a struggle as she did not understand what was taught in class but relied on her male friends to explain things to her. ”I was never a rebel or black sheep of the family as my mother thought, I was just different because I hated gossip.”

    After university, Ibrahim joined the Nigeria Police on the advice of her course mate. She says, “he believed I could make a difference because women from Northern Nigeria did not like joining the police.” However, the rebel in her soon manifested as she had to quit because she did not agree with the secrecy that dominated police operations. In 1989, she moved to the ministry of justice as a state counsel which was a big deal. Seven years later, Ibrahim resigned to set up her law firm as the first female lawyer from her state. ”It was tough, for two years I had no single client because no one believed in me as a woman and in the area where I come from, cases are settled through other means.”

    Undaunted, she went back to the ministry of justice to beg for social welfare cases on pro bono basis. However, many of these cases bordering on violence against women and paternity issues were resolved outside the courts. This was because opinion leaders and community elders settled these cases as litigation was frowned at.

    Recalling her most memorable experience in court, Ibrahim says as a state attorney she was always part of preparing cases and accompanied to court by a senior lawyer. However, her senior colleague wanted to groom her and tricked her by going to the restroom a few minutes before their case was called. The judge, looking at her straight in the face, asked her to proceed with the case. ”I managed to do it for the first time but I was shivering and felt like sinking before the judge,” she says.

    In 1999, the northern states in Nigeria introduced sharia law, the strict Islamic legal system which contradicted the country’s secular constitution and prescribes death by stoning for pregnancy outside wedlock. Handling Amina Lawal’s case, a 30-year-old, who was sentenced to death by stoning for conceiving outside marriage by a sharia court, brought her fame and international recognition. Miffed that the man who impregnated Amina was discharged for lack of evidence without a DNA test, Ibrahim led a team of lawyers and won the case. She says at the beginning, it was like any other case for her. ”I had handled similar cases before then. I get most of my cases from Non Governmental Organisations (NGO) but Amina’s case was referred to me by Dan Isaac of the BBC in Lagos.”

    Winning the case was not without a price. She resorted to leaving office early on Fridays before the congregational prayers because of threat from fundamentalists who referred to her as the ” jew of Islam”.’

    This first female lawyer from her locality who was awarded the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought by the European Union Parliament in 2005 and a dozen others from around the world says she never imagined that education could give her a better life.

    ” My mother called me on phone and said she was proud of me for the first time in over forty years. I am not sure what she thought, but I think am not the rebel anymore but the child she would love to see.”

    Ibrahim, who now teaches Woman Justice and Sharia at Harvard University, says it is a turning point for her. She says life is tough as a wife, teacher and mother with two teenage kids in America because you have to balance all. At this point, her Italian husband and kids Nico 15, and Silvio 10, returned from Connecticut where they had gone to spend the thanksgiving break. Nico is a chip off the old block, quiet and lanky with a round face while the youngest (Silvio) is loud and full of youthful exuberance. One can see all the traces of the village rebel Hauwa, though with a cause who ran away to school, in Nico. He hugs his mother and begins to open drawers in the kitchen talking loudly to his friend who came to spend the night. Ibrahim had to order him to go out of her room because he was causing distraction. Silvio complied, but on the condition that he will use her computer which she does not allow under normal circumstances. ”His brother has grown but he has refused to grow. He always wants to be beside me. Anytime I travel, he misses me a lot .”

    Ibrahim who holds a Masters degree in International Law and Diplomacy says her dream is to see a Northern Nigeria where women have equal opportunities like their male counterparts. ”My plan for the future is to see that things are done differently and that we are able to maintain those parts of our justice system that have worked for us instead of importing transitional justice which emphasises building of more prisons instead of schools.” She recently presented her first book, Shariah Law: Seven Strategies for Achieving Justice in Shariah Courts. ”

    On what she considers as her weakness, she says trusting people and always wanting to have her way. Regarding Ibrahim’s love for properties despite her humble background, she says it is a matter of belief that buying properties is a way of saving for the rainy day.

    What would she have done apart from legal practice? Ibrahim says nursing because she loves to care for people. She says, ”you can be whatever you choose to be, all you need is to have it within you,” drops her phone on the sofa and moves to the kitchen to prepare dinner for the family.