Why did you decide to write this book?
For a long time, I refused to talk
about my story. I refused all articles, interviews. One day, I told myself that
if I refused testifying, other girls will continue to experience modern slavery.
There will be other unhappy children, other “Tinas”. This is what gave me the
courage.
Why did you title the book, My Life Has A Price?
It was
proposed by Virginia Fuertes, the editor with whom I worked. I immediately found
that corresponded to my story. My life has a price since Godwin Okpara gave
money to my parents to buy me. But my life has also a price worth far more: the
price of tears, fear and courage.
Considering what you went through in your adoptive parents’
home, do you blame your dad for letting you go through all those?
No. My
father believed in doing what was best for me. He believed sincerely in giving
me the opportunity to study in France and have a better future. The Okparas told
him that I would go to school and when Linda Okpara made trips to Nigeria, she
went to see my father and lied: “Oh yes, Tina works well in school,
etc…”
Have you been able to get over the traumatic experience?
In
part, yes. Because I was able to go back to school and get a job. Because I work
with seniors and I feel useful. Because people have helped me: educators, my
lawyer, friends. But I still have crying spells and nightmares. I wanted to
write this book also to get it out of me. It came out, but it remains
inside.
You had a secret notebook while going through the harrowing
experiences. Did the raw material for the book come from the jottings you
made?
Initially, I was not thinking about it. These notebooks were used
to dump all my sorrow, all my hatred for Linda. It was my lifeline and my
friend. But when I started writing the book, I took out the books. It was very
hard to read everything.
You portrayed Mamie as cunning and subtly
wicked. How were you able to cope with her?
At one point, I thought she
might be my ally. But very quickly, I realised that she was spying on me,
denouncing me and I learned to be wary of her. She did this because, as everyone
in the house, she was afraid of Linda. And finally, she witnessed my tortures
without saying anything.
What actually gave you the strength to survive
the ordeal?
When I appeared on French television, a presenter first made
a summary of the book and my life. Meanwhile, on a giant screen behind me, they
ran images of Godwin Okpara as Paris Saint-Germain player. It was horrible. At
the end, the presenter of the show turned to me and asked: “Tina, how did you
survive that?” I was prepared to answer a lot of questions, but not that. There
was a silence on the set of the show; I felt all members of the audience
watching me. And a tear ran down my cheek. I was looking for the answer and it
came. I said: ‘For the love of my father.’ It’s true. During all these years of
suffering, I thought of him. I did not want to disappoint him. I remembered his
kindness, his love. I also thought much about my mother, who was in
heaven.
Did Godwin Okpara show any amorous interest in you before he
actually raped you?
I do not know. In any case, he never tried to seduce
me. He took what he wanted, suddenly, without love, without feeling, just for
fun.
When did it occur to you that the Okparas didn’t have good plans for
you?
I gradually realised when my school year was always delayed and at
the same time, I had more work to do at home. And Linda was gradually changing
her attitude towards me. At the beginning, it was ‘Tina, please, can you do that
for me?’ Later, it became: ‘Tina, do this. Tina, why have you not done this
yet?’ The day she spat it in my face that schooling was not for me because I was
too stupid, I lost all hope.
You portray Linda as actually controlling
Godwin in your book. Could you tell me how the couple met each other and got
married?
I do not know how they met. Linda had a great influence on her
husband. She was older, I think, and more authoritarian. He was afraid of her, I
think.
Why do you think Godwin didn’t have the courage to challenge Linda
over the way she was maltreating you?
On the football field, he was
perhaps a courageous defender, but in life, he behaved like a coward. He was
afraid of her. She dominated him psychologically. He was the child and she the
mother. And I think he was not opposed to her because I was not important to
him. I was something like a piece of furniture. You do not argue with your wife
because she abused a table or chair.
In your book, you said Godwin gave
your father some money. Did Godwin actually buy you? Or is the money a kind of
price he paid for you?
I think the Okparas were malignant. They gave
N30,000, the equivalent of 375 euros to my father, telling him that it was a
gift. It was better hidden. In fact, they purchased me without my father’s
knowledge. I believe that my father did not sell me .
The couple are
still serving their jail terms. But you didn’t write about what happened to
their children. Where are their children? Who is taking care of
them?
After the arrest of Godwin and Linda, they were placed in foster
homes. For them also, this story is a disaster. I often think about them because
I loved them.
How long did it take you to write the book?
It took
an entire year.
You wrote the book in collaboration with Cyril Guinet.
Could you explain the nature of collaboration?
I did not know Cyril
before writing this book. This is a journalist, who has always been interested
in issues of child slavery around the world. For example, he went to Haiti to
denounce ‘Restavec’, a traditional slavery of poor children. He knew my story by
attending the trial of Okpara. As luck would have it, he contacted Maitre Peron,
my lawyer, years after the trial. But the day before he called, I had just told
my lawyer that I was considering writing my story. I told Cyril my story and he
wrote, asking me questions along the way. We both worked several times a week. I
cried a lot during these sessions and I gained weight. I even had to see a
shrink not to sink. Then he sent me the chapters to re-read. In re-reading my
story, I cried every time. But I was happy because the book faithfully captures
my story.
What lessons have your experiences taught you?
Hope.
This is the most important lesson. I also learned that I was stronger than I
thought because I survived.
Where actually did you grow up in Lagos
before you went to stay with your uncle?
I grew up at Shomolu, Bariga,
in Lagos.
What was the relationship between your dad and the
Okparas?
My father knew Godwin Okpara thanks to football. Godwin, when he
was young, had played in a company where my father worked.
Does your past
experience affect the way you relate with people now?
I do not know. I
cannot say how I would relate with people if my life had been
different.
Are you in any relationship now? What plans do you have for
the future?
Like all girls of my age, I dream of Prince Charming. I want
to be in love, get married and have children. I always dream of having a large
family: two boys and two girls.
Do you intend relocating to Nigeria very
soon?
Maybe to see my family, I have returned several times
since.
In your book, you gave the impression that your father was
poisoned? Do you still believe that?
He died in a very mysterious
way.
What native language did your parents speak. Where are you
originally from in Nigeria?
At home we spoke Alago our native language
and Yoruba. I come from Nassarawa State.
Considering what you went
through, are you satisfied with the judgment?
At the trial, I said all I
wanted was a halt to the torture. I wanted to go to school and have a normal
life, not to be a slave. Nobody should be a slave in the 21st Century. I told
the judges: “If people like Godwin Okpara, if they want to pay to see him play
football, release him but withdraw me from them.” Years in prison, it is normal
in terms of what they have done. But that won’t give me back my childhood and my
innocence.
Why did you think the couple behaved the way they did to
you?
You should ask them. But I think they behaved so partly because
others had done so before them and others are still doing it. For a certain part
of the population, exploiting children is not wrong.
It is a tradition;
it has always been this way and they do not understand why it should stop.
Unfortunately, Linda and Godwin Okpara are not isolated cases. And today as I am
answering your questions, there are many other ‘Tinas’ who suffer. This must
stop!
Source: PmNews
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