Mrs. Akudo George is pregnant. The
21-year-old woman got married about 10 months earlier and is naturally excited.
She has always been in high spirit though, but an experience she had in Oyingbo
market, Ebute Meta in Lagos left her petrified.
Seven months pregnant George was
haggling with a fruit seller when she heard someone say, “Please give me
money.” She turned to behold a small man standing beside her. The man’s
features showed that though small in stature, he was not a kid but a full grown
adult.
She recalled, “I was petrified. I
just handed the money I was about to pay the fruit seller to the little man. I
felt dizzy all of a sudden. The little man took the money and said, ‘thank you
very much madam. Don’t be scared. I mean you no harm. Life is tough for people
like us. God bless you. You’ll give birth to very tall children’. I said ‘amen’
weakly. It wasn’t a pleasant encounter. I went through the remaining weeks of
the pregnancy in a daze. I had heard stories of how normal babies changed to
other things in the womb. I had to tell my husband, doctor and mother. I
prayed. That was 36 years ago. My son, Chibuzor, grew into a healthy man. But
that pregnancy was difficult because I developed high blood pressure because of
that chance encounter with a little man.”
If George felt this way just because
a ‘little man’ approached her, what about the feeling of the ‘little man’?
Mr. Moses Ogbaji is 29 years old, but
his three-foot height sharply belies his age. However, his face and mannerisms
show the maturity that is seemingly lacking in his tiny frame.
Ogbaji is a dwarf, but this did not
stop him from fantasising about being a pilot, particularly in his childhood.
Even as a grown man, Ogbaji said he sometimes wishes he was taller, so he could
have a shot at fulfilling his childhood fantasy.
He said. “I wish that I could be a
pilot; to be up in the air and travelling everywhere. I remember dreaming about
it, especially when I was younger, but a person of my stature cannot be a
pilot. So I will have to miss not having the opportunity to become a pilot in
my lifetime.”
According to the Little People of
America, a non-profit organisation that offers support to dwarfs and their
families, dwarfism is “an adult height of four feet 10 inches (147 cm) or
under, as a result of medical or genetic condition.”
In general terms, dwarfism is a
condition of short stature.
Indeed, job preferences for dwarfs
are limited, particularly in a developing country like Nigeria. Dwarfs are also
not considered to be suitable for driving, joining the security force or taking
part in sporting activities, such as athletics, that tend to emphasise the use
of limbs. But beyond that, dwarfs are generally considered to be at a
disadvantage in a world dominated by relatively tall people. They are often
bullied, cheated and jeered in educational, work and social settings.
Also, dwarfs are called by different
names, mostly derogatory, in different places and languages. For instance, they
are ‘Arara’ in Yoruba and ‘Gagere’ or ‘Wada’ in Hausa.
In Igbo, the name for dwarfs is
‘Akakpo’, which is sometimes used as an insult to any one considered as short.
It is also said that if a woman insults an ‘Akakpo’, she will end up giving
birth to one.
But universally, midget is a common
term used to describe dwarfs, but it is also often regarded as offensive. In
places like Canada and the US, many dwarfs now prefer to be called ‘little
people’, but this has not yet caught on across the world, with some people
still referring to dwarfs as ‘pygmies’.
Pygmies are an ethnic group of
averagely short adult people that can be found in some African countries
including Cameroon, Gabon, Angola, Botswana, Rwanda, Burundi, Central African
Republic and the Democratic Republic of Congo, where they are said to make up
two per cent of its population.
However, Ogbaji, who hails from Oju
Local Government Area of Benue State, said people sometimes call him ‘Congo’ on
the streets of Lagos.
“Some people call us ‘Congo’; they
will say that we are from the Democratic Republic of Congo and not Nigeria,” he
said.
Basically, dwarfs face stigma and
discrimination because of their stature, so they consequently withdraw socially
and tend to associate more with fellow dwarfs by clustering together.
In Lagos, Moyosore Abiodun Shopping
Complex, Oshodi and Ebute-Ilaje in Bariga area serve as base where dwarfs of
various ethnic groups from across the country are found.
Chibuna Emeka, 20, who is the only
dwarf in his family, said most of them are into film making to survive the
public ridicule they face, along with the limited opportunities available to
them. Even with that, Emeka claimed that they are often cheated by other people
in the movie industry, and therefore, resolved to the marketing of CDs
themselves.
“People look at us and laugh but I
know that I didn’t create myself. We gather here in the morning, and then we go
out to market and converge here in the evening,” Emeka said.
He is married to a tall woman,
Chinasa, and they have a daughter who is not a dwarf. Emeka said he was pleased
that his daughter, Happiness, did not take after him and so, saved from the
pains that characterised his childhood. Emeka, who grew up in Abia State, only
had elementary education because according to him, much of his childhood was
spent as a lonely boy.
He said, “I was always alone and I
had no friends; it was how my mind wanted it.”
But in spite of his stature and
unlike Emeka, Ogbaji considered himself a ‘yuppy dwarf’ and his dressing bore
testimony to his claim. While speaking to Saturday
PUNCH, Ogbaji had two earrings on his left ear, one on his right and
another ring to adorned his nose. His permed hair, combed backwards, was black
and shiny.
Ogbaji drinks, goes clubbing and even
asks women for a dance, although he admitted that his advances are not always
successful and that dancing with a tall woman could sometimes be awkward. He
said little men are good in bed that women fight over them, adding that he has
two tall girlfriends, one of whom might become his wife later in the year.
“I have two girlfriends and they are
tall. I wooed the first one but it was the second one who wooed me and now,
they are fighting over me,” Ogbaji said, attributing his love dilemma to his
‘dress sense’ and ‘sweet loving’ nature.
He said he was lucky to get his first
girlfriend to agree after several failed attempts to get a woman. Ogbaji
recalled an unpleasant experience he had with a lady, who declined his love
advances some years back.
“I was lucky with my girlfriend. I
remember one tall girl I wooed one day, who said, ‘you no dey shame? You short
person coming to meet me’. She laughed and said she didn’t want a child that
would look like me,” Ogbaji said, adding that the lady left him standing as she
walked off.
Even though, Ogbaji has starred in
several movies including Golden
House and Land of the Dwarf, he said he
still sometimes feels bad when people jeer at him and call him names.
He said, “I always tell them that I’m
a normal human being but sometimes, I still feel annoyed with myself.”
Tags
Society
Is God that created you guys,so live your life with swagg nothing megga
ReplyDeleteGod,Thank u so much.
ReplyDeleteGovernment should see to their welfare,as people will not want to give them employment. It could be frustrating but we the lucky ones, don't even care to assist them.
ReplyDeleteThey should learn to be more organised like the Albino Association of Nigeria.
ReplyDeleteThey should also try and ensure that Education is a priority for their members, by getting Scholarship from their various states and also Form their website,blog,twitter page or facebook page...Knowledge is key these day to development...
Brother, u make whole lots of sense, govt. Should open a scholarship scheme to assist their education. This should be paramount their lives endeavour!
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