The
footballer has shared the part two of his family travails via his
Facebook page for every other African family to learn from.
Read below...
SEA,
here is another part of the story I have kept inside since. Today I
feel the constant need to let it out. If I share my stories, it is
because I believe every story comes with a lesson. And the lesson is for
anyone that is reading this. This is about a brother who keeps saying
today that I am not a good support for our family. His name is Rotimi
Adebayor. At the age of 13, he did something very bad. He and I know
what he did. Because of that our parents had to send him to a village
far from the big city. When I started to be successful in football and I
went to Togo for vacation; at that time one of my mother’s friend came
from the village to visit us. As she explained how Rotimi was suffering
in the village, I immediately asked them to bring him back into the
city. As soon as he came back, I made sure I put him in school. For me
that is normal.
In
2002, I went to play the AFCON in Mali and I had the huge privilege to
swap my shirt with Marc-Vivien Foé. May his soul rest in peace. When I
got back to Togo, I put that shirt in a secure place. My brother found a
way to steal that shirt and sold it.
When
I moved from Metz to Monaco, we reached an advanced stage in the
Champions League and we played against Real Madrid. It was one of most
beautiful day of my life because I was lucky enough to get a signed
shirt from the football legend Zinedine Zidane. As I brought that shirt
back to Togo, my brother still found a way to steal that shirt and sold
it.
When
I was in Metz, I was earning about €15,000 a month. I wanted to get
something unique for my mom to thank her for all she did for me. I
wanted to make her happy. So I decided to take an amount worth 3 months
of my wages and I bought her a Cartier neckless for about €45,000.
Rotimi and his friends Akim(@Yam Freedom) and Tao (@Sao Tao Oyawole)
made a plan and stole that precious neckless. They sold it for about
€800. When my mom and I found out, my mother asked me not to bother
because he is the younger brother. Despite the situation, I would like
to take this same occasion to wish all the mothers out there a Happy
Mother’s Day!
In
my house, I have a storage room where I keep some of my belongings when
I travel back to Europe. I am the only one with that key but my brother
managed to get a master key that was able to open every single door in
the house. He frequently stole drinks and other items from that room.
After
all this we kept saying “blood is thicker than water” and we moved on.
Therefore, I decided to take him where I started my football in France. I
brought him to a great football academy in France. You already know how
this story ended. He stole cellphones from many of his teammates and
they sacked him from the football academy. By the way, after I published
the first story about him, he called me to say that he did not steal
exactly 21 phones. He claimed that the number was lower than that.
Still...Is that acceptable? He also added that I should be happy that he
stole drinks and other items from my storage room. I asked him why and
he replied: "Because I am your brother".
Jacques
Songo’o who is now a retired Cameroonian footballer also had his son in
the academy and he was a good friend of Rotimi. Let me add that he was
part of my development as a footballer and he always gave me good
advices. I was in Togo on my days off when Songo’ocalled me; he sounded
very angry. He explained to me how my brother stole his son’s PSP. When I
asked my brother why he did that, he argued that he forgot it in his
bag. How can you forget someone else’s device in your bag and travel
with it from France to Togo? Since that day, my relationship with
Songo'o changed and he has become pretty distant with me and my family.
I
was still in Monaco when I decided to collect all football boots from
my teammates so I could give them to people in Africa. I had a huge bag
full of shoes. I brought that bag to Togo. A few days after when I
decided to give the boots out to the people in need, I noticed the bag
full of boots disappeared. Later on, I found out that my brother was the
one who stole the bag and went to sell the shoes in Hedzranawoé (famous
public market in Togo).
One
day, my mom called me early in the morning when I was still in bed. She
told me that Rotimi has gotten a Visa to go to Dubai so he can play
football out there. He had to leave that day with his friend Kodjovi
(@Denilson de Souza) who was in the same situation. It was either they
went that day or the Visa would be suspended. I asked one of my guys at
the time (@Agui Mozino) to go find tickets for my brother and his
friend. We could not find any economy class ticket on that day so I had
to get them both first class tickets. After all, it was an opportunity
for him to make his own career in Dubai. Only 4days later, Rotimi went
back home. He explained how the lifestyle in Dubai was not made for him.
He said he wasn’t free to do what he wanted to do because it is a
strictly Muslim place. He couldn't drink, party as much as he wanted or
kiss girls in public.
The
part 3 is coming out soon and it will be about the man that calls
himself the father of the family @Kola Adebayor A.K.A Lion of Judah.
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