Born in a remote village somewhere in the North Yaro Where the fulanli herdsmen twirl sticks as they guard cattles Yaro Makes one remember that boy in the bible who tended to his father's sheep all day Yaro Life was rosy, bed warm and cosy. Mother was called "Mama" and age stricken father was "abba". I sometimes wondered who matchmaked them Mother looked like she was babysitting the world Father looked like he was going to die any minute But they loved me and that was all my infant mind wanted For you see I was nothing but a Yaro.
I loved the mornings, when goats where being let out of sheds And I ran around the huts in our compounds In between my father's leg and over my mother's lap Bowls of koko and ***** of kosai couldn't quieten me. I never knew your breakfast of "Kellogs varieties" or One apple a day, to keep the doctor at bay. For you see I was nothing but a Yaro. But I was alright or so I thought. The afternoons were spent chasing Hassan and Hussein Those "wicked" twins who would not allow our chickens rest My world was coloured brown, brown goats, brown huts Brown sand, brown faces and maybe brown hearts. Brown was the only colour in the world except of course The sky, which was blue sometimes and white at other times.
One day, when you were still in homes covered with zinc Father pulled me out of bed and handed me over to some fierce looking men Mother wouldn't look at me, Hassan and Hussein stood far away. Father was the one holding me so I knew he was not dead yet. He handed me my new pair of slippers and pointed to the men "They'll teach you life," he said. "But.." I replied only to be cut short by the sting of a slap "You're nothing but a..." "Yaro", I replied. So this was it..I was leaving me behind. Mother hid behind her layers of clothing like a coward Father stood proud like an English man I stood with all of them around me feeling nothing But what my Yaro mind allowed me to feel.