Iyabo Abade,
the former Nigeria Super Falcon player who has been living as hermaphrodite
(having both male and female reproductive organs) for many years is now living
her life as a male. In 2004, she got her surgery done at USA and now a complete
male named James Johnson.
Iyabo
Abade is now James Johnson 24naijanews.com gathered!
In
an interview with Punch news paper, he talked on his challenges in a recent
time. He talked about his relationship with former Falcon Players and how he is
living his life now.
The
former woman is now a man that women chase around.
Read
details according to the Punch;
Now that you are a man,
has it been easy playing men’s football?
I thank God for how far He has
brought me. I have made every effort to get to the top as a footballer but
there is no support from anywhere, even the Nigeria Football Federation. I am
just trying on my own to get to the top but it hasn’t been easy. You go for
trials and you do well and you are recruited but after sometime, they will
start acting funny; they use my past against me. I try to ensure that I don’t
let clubs know who I am. I don’t like telling them that I am the former
Iyabo Abade; I have to go there like every other normal player and fight for a
place in the team. But when they hear that former Iyabo Abade has signed for
either Crown FC or Plateau United, they start discriminating against me.
Meanwhile I got there as James Johnson but they keep asking, “Can she cope in
the midst of guys?” They have forgotten that I am a man and I met their
requirements before they signed me up. Once they now know my past, they won’t
allow me to play anymore. Were they blind when they signed me? With that, I
feel frustrated and discriminated against so I decided that there was no need
disturbing myself and I decided to quit. I am praying that God helps me so that
I can continue my career abroad. I think things will be better over there.
Has the society accepted
you for who you are?
Some do but some have not.
Everybody cannot like you for who you are, so you just have to take life the
way it is. My colleagues who we played together in the women’s league all
welcome me. Some people want to be my friends even when they don’t know who I
am and even when they know that I am the former Iyabo Abade turned James
Johnson, they are still happy to be my friends. I am happy with that. There is
no need for me to be feeling sad that God created me the way I am. So, I am
happy with life but I feel sad because some people are out there to cut short
your happiness. I will be happy playing football but some people don’t like it.
What is your relationship
with your Falcons teammates?
Some of them still welcome me;
they see me just like every other person. They don’t discriminate against me;
we grew up together and did things together even though I am no more in their
group. I am so happy about that. When the news first came out, a lot of them
were shocked because they didn’t even know anything about hermaphrodite. But
later, they sympathised with me; they said I am not God and didn’t create myself.
That was how it went and we are still friends till now.
Your rehabilitation should
be in stages. How far have you gone?
I am still on it. After I went
for check-up in 2009, I am due for the next stage, where a surgery will be
carried out to enable me become a full man and live a normal and perfect life.
But every effort has been futile; nothing is really happening and I am looking
up to God to intervene in this issue. I have made every effort and gone to the
NSC but they did nothing. I took a letter there and was going there for about
seven months. So I have to look elsewhere to enable me complete the surgery. I
also wrote to NFF when Sani Lulu was the head and he gave me hope. He said,
‘Bring your letter and we will see what we can do.’ But at the end, they said,
‘We don’t know what happened to your letter.’ When it gets to releasing money,
that is when the letter gets missing. Only Family Worship helped me a great
deal to go for the check-up.
How much do you need for
the surgery?
I will need about N12m for the
final surgery. My doctor says I have to stay in the US for one year, so that he
can monitor the final process. Aside the surgery, I will have to pay for
accommodation for one year and other things like feeding and transportation.
Now that you haven’t
finished the rehabilitation, would you say you are living a man’s life?
I would say I am living happily
but my joy will be to complete the whole stages of the rehabilitation. Then I
can boast of myself as a real man just like other guys. I will say I still need
the final surgery before I can answer your question further.
You once had the ambition
of becoming the first person ever to play for the female and male national
teams of a country but the dream seems dashed. How do you feel?
I feel rejected and frustrated
because football is my life but the NSC and the NFF are not in support of my
ambition. If we had a good sports commission, I won’t be in this situation. Do
they want me to cry to the US government? That will be a disgrace to Nigeria.
Who are those that stood
behind you during your trying times?
I want to thank former FCT
ministers Abba Gana and Nasir el-Rufai; they were very helpful. I wrote to the
former First Lady, Turai Yar’Adua, and Patience Jonathan, who was then Second
Lady. Though I didn’t get money from the First Lady but I was given the
opportunity to enter Aso Rock. Unfortunately, her husband fell sick and she
couldn’t attend to me. She asked some people to attend to me but I didn’t hear
from them. The present First Lady has not done anything to help me despite all
the efforts I have made to reach her, a fellow Niger Deltan like her. If
northerners can show concern for me, why not her? Family Worship also gave me
money for my check-up as well as the Redeemed Christian Church of God. I appreciate
all of them.
Would you accept if the US
says you should naturalise and play for them?
I will accept it with both
hands. It’s everybody’s dream to be a US citizen, so I will jump at the
opportunity.
What is your advice to
other hermaphrodites, who are ashamed to come out or don’t have the opportunity
you have?
I have some already and I have
given my doctor in the US their contacts. They are two and they are into female
football. They say a problem shared is half solved. If people don’t know your
problem, you will die with it, so they just have to come out and let the world
know what they are passing through. They need to look unto God. If not for God,
I would have been a forgotten issue because at times, I feel like committing
suicide. You will want to run into a moving truck but I thank God for being in
charge of my life. I am happy today and everybody wants to mingle with me. So,
life goes on.
Are you thinking of
setting up a foundation for hermaphrodites?
Yes, so that many people with
such issues can be treated. I hope to make it a worldwide foundation. There are
a lot of hermaphrodites but they are shy or afraid to come out. There was a
case that happened in Delta State when they almost killed a hermaphrodite. They
said she is a witch. But it is not proper because these people didn’t create
themselves. They should use me as a sign of hope. They can also be treated and
be happy just like myself. I won’t blame them for not coming out because the
support is not there in Nigeria. If they come out, they will be discriminated
against.
When ladies you approach
realise later that you were once like them, do they run away?
I am loved by women, there’s no
doubt about that. They want to be my best friend. Everywhere I go, women always
appreciate me because of my looks even when they later get to know about my
issue. They always want to grab the opportunity to date someone like me. Some
of them are happy to be with me because they have never seen such a person
before. Every woman is mixing with James Johnson.
How was your trip to the
US in 2012 with the Marasata Soccer Academy?
Marasata Soccer Academy brought
me back to life because I felt so frustrated when I was neglected. The academy
brought me in to lead the female team because I once played female football.
That was how I became head of the coaching crew and with time, I will get to
the top. The trip to the US last year was a success.
Aside not having a club
side, do you still play football?
Of course yes. Football is part
of me and I play every now and then, even with my boys in the academy. I derive
joy in football; I play with Karo All Stars in Abuja and we play so many
competitions.
If you look back now, is
there a time you will recount with joy while playing female football?
Sometimes I feel sad that I
didn’t continue what I know how to do best in the midst of the girls but I
ignore it and let go. It’s not over, I still feel I will play for this country
one day as a man but whether I play or not, I am happy with life. I was excluded
from the 1999 Women’s World Cup but when the team returned home, my club FCT
Queens had a match against Pelican Stars, which paraded all the superstars like
Ann Agumanu, Mercy Akide, Eberechi Opara and Stella Mbachu. I was the only star
in my team. It’s a game people still talk about. We were 2-1 down and I scored
an incredible goal from the flank. That goal helped us beat Pelican 3-2 and
they were complaining that why did they allow me to play the game after it was
discovered that I am a hermaphrodite. People still say it was the best game
they saw me play. My goal gingered my teammates to beat them. I will never
forget that game. FCT Queens also won the Challenge Cup and I was one of the
team’s trainers. That was how I got help to go for surgery. We were hosted in
Sheraton and the then FCT Minister Nasir el-Rufai sponsored me to the US for
the surgery.
Initially, was it easy
blending from a female to male?
It was not easy in the beginning
playing with the men but I took up the challenge. I didn’t get support as a
male footballer. If I had remained as a female footballer, I knew where I would
be now. In men’s football, it’s all about who you know. If you don’t have
someone to back you up, forget it, no matter what you play. I felt there was no
need going to a club and telling them that I was Iyabo Abade. I wanted to be
there on merit but after signing, I faced discrimination. I played for
NEPA and Plateau United. At Plateau, they brought me in always as a late
substitute because they didn’t believe I could play. But we were five they
selected out of over 100 players that came for trials. If I was not good, why
did they pick me from such a large number of players?
Do you sometimes feel like
being a woman?
I chose to become a man because
it is what God wants me to be. I didn’t use money as my priority in opting to
be a man. If it was for money reasons, I would have remained as a woman because
I was getting to the top of female football in Nigeria. I am happy with the
decision I took. If I became a female, I probably wouldn’t have been happy with
my life. So I just decided to move on. I am not regretting the step I made. I
can tell you, women are running after me like Usain Bolt and I think it is
better for me. I like it that way. I never expected it that way. Today, I am
pleased that people want to know me.
We know you have been very
close to Agatha Agu for a very long time. Are you planning to get married to
her?
She is a very good person and if
God says she is going to be my wife, I will be the happiest man because she
deserves it; she has always been there for me right from our days in female
football. She has been my backbone even when things are not working well. I
know by His grace, we will get there.
Can you tell us your best
moment?
I don’t have any yet until I
wear the colours of the national team. If I cannot play for the main Eagles, at
least I can for the home-based Eagles. I will appreciate if I get the
opportunity.
If the home-based Eagles
camp is thrown open ahead of the 2014 CHAN, do you think you can make it?
With God, I will make it. I am
so sure of myself.
What is your word for
coach Stephen Keshi?
I wish him the best. He has won
the AFCON trophy, so we should appreciate him even if he is making some
mistakes. We shouldn’t be criticising him always. He is a good coach and he
needs our support.
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