Explore Naija
Real stories. True voices. The heart and soul of everyday Nigerians.
Narrated by: Kelvin Olorunfemi
When I finally touched down in Toronto, wearing a second-hand winter jacket from Balogun Market and shivering like a goat under harmattan, I thought back to the things I had to do, and the people I had to pay, to make that dream possible.
This is not your average japa story. This is the market where dreams are bought, tears are traded, and who you know can mean everything.
I graduated from LASU in 2017. Second class upper. Mass Communication. I thought I was the next great journalist. But after three years of applying for jobs and writing copy for one annoying SME boss who paid ₦45,000 and insulted me every Monday, I knew I had to get out.
Everywhere I turned, someone was going: UK, Canada, Germany, even Cyprus. My closest friend, Emma, got his UK student visa in two months because his uncle “knew somebody at the embassy.”
I started feeling like an abandoned iPhone 6 in a room full of 13 Pro Max users.
I told myself, Kelvin, you go japa by force or by fraud.
First, I tried the clean route. IELTS. ₦90k.
Got Band 8.
Applied to schools. Paid agents. Got two offers.
Then came VISA wahala. Canada said No, UK said Try Again Later. My bank statement didn’t balance the way their own dey balance.
I cried that night. Real tears. The kind that taste like regret and soaked indomie.
That’s when I heard about the “connection people.”
They don’t have websites. No signboards. But once you’re desperate enough, the road will open.
Someone introduced me to Brother Samuel, an “apostle” turned agent.
He said, “Kelvin, if you wan enter Canada, e sure for you. But you need correct document and small oil money. ₦2.5 million.”
I asked, “For what na?”
He smiled, “We go package you as international volunteer. One of our people dey for NGO inside Ottawa. From there, na permanent stay straight.”
I was scared. But I was tired of Nigeria. Tired of NEPA. Tired of using VPN to tweet my pain.
I agreed.
I sold my iPhone XR, borrowed from my cousin, begged my mum who dipped into her co-op savings. She asked, “Kelvin, you sure say this thing go work?”
I told her, “Mummy, Na who know road dey get visa.”
We submitted the papers. The NGO looked fake, but the documents looked real. I was even trained on how to answer embassy questions.
The day of my interview, I wore my only suit and prayed like Elijah. I told the white woman I was going to Canada to volunteer and “impact vulnerable children with trauma-based journalism.”
I was shaking inside.
Two weeks later, I got the visa.
The joy I felt when I collected my passport with that sticker! I wanted to run naked from Ikeja to Ojuelegba.
I packed one Ghana Must Go. My flight was 3am. I didn’t sleep.
Landing in Toronto was like waking up in a movie. Cold air, quiet roads, and people minding their business.
But my host didn’t show up.
The address on my form didn’t exist.
Brother Samuel’s number didn’t go through.
Omo. I stood at the airport like a lost child. That was when reality hit me: I had been packaged and dumped.
I called a random church listed online. A Nigerian pastor picked up.
“Where are you?” he asked.
“I’m stranded at Pearson Airport, sir.”
He came and picked me. Gave me food, old clothes, and a mattress to sleep in the church basement. That’s where I stayed for 2 months, doing small errands and volunteering while I figured out how to restart my life.
Eventually, I found a cleaning job through a church member. Then another at a car wash. Then a warehouse. I saved. I cried. I worked. I rebuilt.
Today, I’m better. I have a shared apartment. I go to school part-time. I still send money home. But I haven’t seen Brother Samuel again. And maybe it’s for the best.
Because even though I made it out, I know so many who didn’t. Some got deported. Some lost millions. Some are still waiting. Some are six feet under.
This japa life is sweet in pictures. But behind it? Blood, debt, fake agents, fake friends, broken families, and silent pain.
🛑 Don’t let desperation push you into the wrong hands.
🛑 If you don’t know road, ask, but verify.
🛑 Every connection is not divine.
✅ Build your japa journey with wisdom, not just vibes.
✅ If God opens the door, walk in boldly. If it’s man forcing it open, be careful.
Because in Nigeria, Na who know road dey get visa… but sometimes, that road na expressway to sorrow.
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