I woke up yesterday morning and saw a post from a Facebook
friend. Folake Afolabi’s son Pelumi Praise Afolabi who’s a student of Command
Secondary School Ojo Lagos Nigeria in Jss 1 Diamond was flogged because his
parents didn’t come for the school’s open day.
The mark of the cane is seen on
his eye lid and beneath his eyes. This means that it narrowly missed his eye
because it was closed at that moment when she used the cane on him.
Now this isn’t the first time I’m seeing this.
Last week, I saw the picture of a 3 year old that was
flogged mercilessly. Black and blue doesn’t depict this for a boy of that age. It’s brutal and wicked.
Why did the teacher
flog him? He urinated and defecated on his body without informing the teacher
he wanted to go to the loo.
This is hilarious because we are talking about a 3
year old not a teenager.
Nigeria is an interesting country. A particular yellow network service provider barred
people’s lines because it wasn’t registered.
They expected midwives to leave
the delivery room, teachers to leave their students, doctors to leave their
patients and people to leave their jobs no matter how sensitive just for them to gain access to their lines. The NCC and
other appropriate bodies didn’t even complain. I guess it finally dawned on
them to go to various companies in order to reach the people there even though it was late.
If Pelumi’s parents have white collar jobs and a paid
employment, how are they supposed to attend the open day? Why can’t the school
fix the open day on a weekend or a convenient day for each parent to come
around and check their child? Why punish the students for what the parents did?
For the 3 year old boy, I feel really sad. This can
cause trauma for him and affect his own mental health. Do you know the boy may
hate school and hate anything that concerns learning just because of this particular
act?
Each child is different from another child and her
training should also be different too.
Many teachers these days aren’t trained; they find
themselves teaching just to make ends meet and you’ll see this in their
approach to teaching. Many of these teachers don’t care for these kids. They don’t
even know there is anything or a book on Child Psychology and this is really
sad.
A teacher is one who affects destines and lives. Sadly,
many people don’t understand this fact.
I think there should be a psychologist for teachers in schools. Imagine
a teacher who’s facing difficult times at home: landlord is asking for his
dues, the spouse is misbehaving, sick parents, trouble from the in-laws, etc. On
this particular day, she just wants to break down but she has to go to school
so that her salary will be complete but a student annoys her. How do you think
she will beat this child? She would pour all her sorrow, anger and pain into
flogging this child.
I’ve always wondered, is flogging a child always the
way out? It can never be!
Sometimes all you need to do is ask the child why she
did something wrong, why he isn’t talking or what the problem is. Just be
friendly with kids and they will tell you their secrets. There may be something
troubling the child that you may be able to help her deal with.
This is the work of a guidance counsellor for schools.
If you help the destiny of one child, do you know how
many more destinies you’ve saved or empowered?
Think about this!
P.S Please share this with people as it can help a lot
of people.
Just click the Facebook, Twitter and Google+ in blue
font.
Very true. U also have to look at the school u take your child to. The mothers of these should take theae cases to social media
ReplyDeletei will burn down this school if any of the boys was mine
ReplyDeleteNigerian educational system Na wa!
ReplyDelete