His name is Okenyi Kenechi, he is a graduate of the University of Port
Harcourt, has recounted how he was raped by a staunch church goer.
However according to him, nobody believed him, and the lady who abused
him got away with that.
At some point he got suicidal because of the trauma that experience
caused him, but the counselor who should have helped him, however choose
to ask him if he “enjoyed it”.
His story below:
“There is this woman that lives in our area. She would come to our house
and tell my mother to allow me to go and play with her children. I was
barely 8 and I was in primary 3 or so. She would buy biscuits and sweet
for me. Once we got to her house, she would lure me to her room, spread
her legs and ask me to start sucking her vagina. It went on for days and
she told me that anytime I tried telling anyone, that my navel will dry
up. My mother would never imagine that I was doing the work of her
husband for her.
I caught infections on my lips.
My mother took me to a chemist shop. The man, after examining me, told
my mother to take me to the hospital. My father was away, for months.
The doctor, I was made to understand, told my mother that such
infections could only be gotten through oral sex and with tears in my
mother’s eyes, I had to tell her everything.
My mother confronted the woman. We both worshiped in the same church.
She denied and said that I was lying against her. That she took me as
her own child and would never do such a thing to me. Some people heard
about it and took sides with the woman and believed her. Others closed
their ears and did the sign of the cross. Her husband was wealthy as at
then and they were prominent features in our local church, especially
during bazaars and other launching.
People, mothers, fathers said I was accusing her falsely. I wondered how
I could have made up such a gory tale as at that age and so, I was
heckled, laughed at and made fun of. I stopped going to school for a
while when I couldn’t bear the sneers from people I knew as fellow
church members or friends. My mother was helpless. She did the best she
could but they told her to forgive and leave everything to God. She took
me to a priest who prayed for me and told her not to allow me go to
school on my own for a while. My elder brother became my bodyguard to
school. The first day I resumed school, one boy tried to make fun of me.
I kicked him in the stomach and he collapsed.
When my father got back, he heard about it, he wanted to act and they
told him not to open healed wounds and he too, handed everything to God.
1997 was the year, and I have lived with that scar ever since . My
abuser escaped justice. Not even a strand of her hair was removed. I
still see her wrinkled face anytime I visit home.
One of the older guys that lived at that Ugwu Achara in Nsukka then, I
didn’t know he still remembered how the whole thing played out, called
me some 5 years ago and asked if I could meet with some specialists that
can help people like myself who were abused at younger age, I said yes
and travel from Port Harcourt to Abakiliki to meet with them. During the
cross examination, one of the so-called specialists said something
equivalent to “did you enjoy it?”. I left the place almost immediately,
went back to my Friend’s house and felt suicidal for days. Those who
have never been dealt with psychologically may not understand.
There was no menist group that have stood up for people like myself.
Maybe because I am a boy and boys don’t bleed when they are sexually
abused or because we are just expendables. And so, we carry our baggage
ourselves and try whichever method will heal us faster. If we succeed,
we live to tell the story. If we don’t, we die with our story.
Those dark days, I dreaded going to church and will always walk behind
my mother. My younger brother was just 2 then and he took the whole
attention. I was at the mercy of my older siblings who had little
understanding of what I was passing through. I was seen as a small devil
who could accuse one of the holiest women in church then of such a
crime. The society failed me and it has continued to fail vulnerable
children who are victims of abuse.
In a small group I joined during my undergraduate days, Peer Educators,
firsthand stories abound of people, broken men and women abused by their
older siblings, house helps, clergymen, family friends and random
people who drugged young girls and raped them, young boys sodomized or
raped through the anus. 90 percent of their abusers escaped justice.
So, what are you doing to ensure the safety of your children, of your
younger siblings and all the vulnerable children around? Pedophiles
abound, looking for young preys to devour. Some of us survived the
psychological damage and have moved on with our lives. However, you need
to hear our stories so you can understand that a child needs to be
protected no matter the gender. I would teach my children to report any
form of abuse the first day it happens. It is our problem and we can
solve it.”