HOMELESS 8-YEAR-OLD NIGERIAN CHRISTIAN REFUGEE, WHOSE FAMILY FLED BOKO HARAM, HAS NOW BECOME THE NY STATE CHESS CHAMPION
HOMELESS 8-YEAR-OLD NIGERIAN CHRISTIAN REFUGEE, WHOSE FAMILY FLED BOKO
HARAM, HAS NOW BECOME THE NY STATE CHESS CHAMPION
Emily Jones (Mar 19, 2019)
Tani's father is happy he gets the
freedom to worship and watch his son pursue his dreams in America.
An eight-year-old Nigerian Christian
refugee who fled Boko Haram is now the New York State chess champion for his
age bracket. (Screengrab image: via Facebook video)
Tanitoluwa Adewumi, who goes by
Tani, placed first in the New York State Scholastic Championships, beating out
competitors from elite private schools.
Incredibly, Tani only began learning
chess about a year ago after his family left northern Nigeria in 2017 to escape
Boko Haram's attacks on Christians.
Tani, his parents, and siblings
moved into a homeless shelter when they arrived in America and have been
homeless ever since.
Despite this, he tells the New
York Times, "I want to be the youngest grandmaster."
Tani attends Manhattan's P.S. 116
elementary school and joined the chess club. His teacher waived the costly
chess club fees after seeing Tani's talent.
Russell Makofsky, who oversees the
school's chess program, told USA TODAY he is astonished by the
eight-year-old's quick success.
"It's unheard of for any kid,
let alone one in a homeless shelter," he said.
Before the competition, Tani's
mother took him to free practice sessions in Harlem and allowed him to practice
the game online.
Now, he's preparing for the
elementary national championship in May and spends hours on the homeless
shelter floor practicing.
Meanwhile, his parents are working
just as hard.
Tani's father rents a car that he
uses to drive Uber, and he recently became a licensed real estate salesman. His
mother is learning English and just passed a course to become an in-home health
aide.
Through it all, Tani's family is
still navigating the immigration system and a hearing for their asylum request
is scheduled for August.
But Tani's father is happy he gets
the freedom to worship and watch his son pursue his dreams in America.
"The US is a dream
country," his dad told the Times. "Thank God I live in the
greatest city in the world, which is New York, New York."
After the Times shared Tani's story,
thousands of people gave
donations, raising more than $14,000 to help
his family get a home.
Meanwhile, the Nigerian Christians
who did not get a chance to flee their country are being slaughtered. Boko
Haram has claimed more than 120 lives since February alone and has gained
notoriety as one of the deadliest terror groups in the world.
According to the nonprofit group
Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), 52 people were killed and 100 homes were
destroyed last Monday in the latest attacks on Inkirimi and Dogonnoma villages
in Maro, Kajuru Local Government Area (LGA). The victims included women and
children.
CSW's Chief Executive Mervyn Thomas
urged Nigeria's state and federal governments to end the violence.
"The relentless death and
destruction is a sad indictment of the continuing failure by both levels of
government to fulfill the primary mandate of protecting all its citizens
impartially," he said in a statement.
Nigeria ranks as the 12th worst
country in the world for Christian persecution, according to Open Doors USA's
2019 World Watch List.
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