The Late Mr Abdul Kareem Sow |
The life will live is full of uncertainties. No
one can ascertain as to what happens tomorrow.
We are like candles in the wind that can completely burn out at any
time. What time our candles will burn out, only God knows. The information
about the death of my brother, Abdul Kareem Sow, reached me as a shock. I
couldn't believe it after seeing it on our Kenema Old Students' Association
(the United Kingdom and Ireland) Forum. The preoccupation of the shocking news
made me contact the current Secretary-General of our Alumni, Mr Magba Taimeh,
who confirmed that he is truly dead. I observed some minutes of silence,
thinking of what may have gone wrong, knowing a brother who had sacrificed all
the opportunities in the United Kingdom to serve his country.
I knew Sowman, as we called him, during our
school days at the Government Secondary School Kenema (College of the East). I
was his senior at the school but he was someone that we connected through the
Poor Boys Association (PBA) movement, a movement meant to support comrade
students from poor backgrounds and foster the spirit of humility. He was an
active member like many others. Our connection became, even more, resound out
of our outspoken nature, a bond that continued when we met again at the Christ
the King College Bo (a school meant to groom great and enviable scientists in
Sierra Leone- both pure and social scientists). I was one year ahead of him in
the sixth form.
At the Christ the King College, we hooked up
again in our usual Poor Boys Association movement and we even tried to
introduce drilling which became unsuccessful because of the catholic nature of
the school and the fact that drilling was alien to the diction of the school. I
could remember the many challenges that we faced from some students in the
school in the many times we went around classes where there are fresh students,
taking advantage of absentee teachers in the classes. Our friendship was so strong that we were
meeting for studies after school hours and worked closely in rising above the
fluid nature of the town we were living miles away from parents. During
Ramadan, he will take me to his Fula relatives for us to breakfast and we
shared and cared for each other. Watching each other's back was our norm until
we completed the sixth form.
Upon completion of the Sixth form, Sowman
categorically told me he wanted to go to university abroad and never wanted to
study in Sierra Leone. He had all the qualifications to enter university but
deliberately stood by his determination.
He finally travelled in the late 80s to the United Kingdom. The lesson
that I learnt from his determination is to never give up and that the
impossible can always become plausible. We lost from each other after the post
sixth form era until we met again around the mid-year of 2000.
Brainy and smart as he was, he never took money
before education, like the many fellow Sierra Leoneans that are laid back and
short-sighted about education being secondary in their lives. Sowman was able
to compromise family matters, education and miscellaneous issues-multitasking
by nature. He did his first degree in pharmacology and later pursued his
master's degree in pathology. He worked for the NHS for some years and later
decided to go into teaching. When I asked him why he went into teaching, he
told me because he wanted to have time for the kids and use teaching
skills to provide educational empowerment to the children. That tells us about
his strong family savvy.
Sowman taught chemistry at both secondary and
college levels in the United Kingdom and even became head of the chemistry
department in the college he was teaching. As a global teacher and having the
passion to explore international teaching arena, he took up an international
job in teaching in the East Africa nation of Kenya. In Kenya, he flew our
Sierra Leone flag and the United Kingdom flag high and used the Queen's English
to teach chemistry.
My brother was an entrepreneur and with the true
spirit of self-reliance. Upon coming back to the United Kingdom from the
teaching taster in Kenya to join his family in London, he opened his private
institution, Push for Excellence, where he recruited me and other teachers. He
is one of few Sierra Leoneans that never solely relied on the paid job he was
doing as a teacher but decided to diversify the earning pool out there to
increase his household income.
Sowman was a politician too and a strong and
paid-up member of the Sierra Leone Peoples Party (SLPP). Not only was he a member of the party but a
core member of the new direction that stood by President Julius Maada Bio's
vision to bounce back in the politics of Sierra Leone. I could remember the
many times he tried to convince me to join the SLPP, which my lost hope in the
party after the nightmare experiences during the Tejan Kabba era couldn't allow
me to reckon with. When the SLPP new
direction won the recent election in Sierra Leone, he was not given any
position. He never got frustrated or discouraged but smartly thought to build
his project to provide the invisible hand to his party. I could remember
encouraging him to do so as that is the only way he can survive amid fouls,
knowing very well the ethnic-regional sentiments in the SLPP and APC parties in
Sierra Leone. The project he built was Public-Private Partnership and the focus
was in education. I worked closely with
him to fine-tune the project which he forwarded to the current SLPP government
and fortunately the authorities embraced it and allowed him to carry on the project
at the Ministry of Education.
Until his death, he worked tirelessly to fulfil
the dream of the project in Sierra Leone. He used the many media platforms to
sensitise the country about his project and worked within the purview of the
objectives of the project. I trust that if his candle in wind had not
unexpectedly burnt out, our country would have benefited a lot from the
project. Although my brother is gone to the land of the dead, I hope the
present and future governments will continue his legacy and do not use the
ongoing political bashing strategy in the body politics to block a project that
will immensely benefit our beloved country.
My brother is gone and optimistic his spirit we continue to shadow his the project, Public-Private Partnership at the Ministry of Education.
Sowman left behind a humble and supporting wife
(Binta Sow), charming children and a great extended family. My sympathy to the
entire family and pray that God consoles them and guide them through their
trying times. Those that feel the heat know it best. You need to test the tide
to know what lies in it.
Till we meet again on the next planet, my brother
Abdul Kareem Sow, rest in absolute peace. I know now that you are gone but be
assured you had left an enviable landmark on planet earth.
Amen
Prince
Foday
London,
United Kingdom
Mr Abdul Kareem was a good man. May his soul rest in perfect peace.
ReplyDeleteMr Abdul Kareem was a good man. May his soul rest in perfect peace.
ReplyDeleteRIP
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