Blog

  • Bay Area Gen-Z entrepreneur uses AI to help job seekers

    Michael Yan, co-founder and CEO of Simplify, is on a mission to transform the job search process using artificial intelligence. After experiencing firsthand the frustrations of job hunting — applying to over 100 positions per cycle, manually entering repetitive information, and struggling to stay organized — Yan and his team set out to create a better solution.

    The result was Simplify, a platform designed to streamline recruiting and make job searching more efficient, transparent and fair.

    Founded by Stanford and Berkeley dropouts, Simplify aims to democratize job opportunities regardless of a candidate’s background, location or education. The Artificial Intelligence-powered platform acts as a personal job assistant, guiding users through every hiring process step, from personalized job discovery to one-click applications and seamless organization. Since its launch, Simplify has processed over 30 million job applications, saving users thousands of hours and significantly increasing their chances of landing offers.

    Given the churn in the job market, that’s understandable. The number of Californians looking for jobs jumped by more than 52,000 in the last six months of 2024, and more than 141,000 in the Bay Area now are seeking work, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    The company sparked debate over changes in job search in social media last year, with some commenting that programs like Simplify make everyone mass apply, and others saying that’s unavoidable, but one of the co-founders responded, and most users had a positive impression.

    Yan, a former software engineer at Meta, left Stanford to build Simplify in the heart of the San Francisco Bay Area. As the platform continues to grow, Yan discussed the challenges of modern job searching, the role of AI in recruitment, and his vision for making hiring more accessible for everyone.

    Q: What inspired you to leave Stanford University and start Simplify?

    A: I didn’t intend for this to happen. At Stanford, while applying for a software engineering job at Meta, I sent out over 150 applications. It was frustrating, and I had never made a resume or written a cover letter before. Finding jobs on LinkedIn and Indeed felt impersonal, and they didn’t know my skills or interests. So, in my dorm, I built a simple program to find and apply to software engineering jobs using a Chrome extension. I posted it online, and 10,000 people joined the waitlist within months. That’s when I realized how much demand there was. I wanted to build something I’d use because job hunting is frustrating, and I knew others felt the same. Getting into YC was the big push that made me take the leap. Y Combinator (YC) is a venture capital firm and startup accelerator that helps early-stage companies.

    Q: What challenges did you face as a young entrepreneur, and how did you overcome them?

    A: I had the idea for Simplify at 19 and turned 21 during YC. Learning to build a company, from hiring to scaling, was a huge challenge. Getting our first users was tough since we had little funding and couldn’t compete with Indeed or LinkedIn on ads. So, we got creative. After “Squid Game” came out, I printed 10,000 business cards like the ones in the show and handed them out at Berkeley, Stanford, MIT, Harvard and Northeastern. It grabbed attention, and we gained many early users that way. Trying to compete with giants wasn’t easy, but scrappy growth strategies made the difference.

    Q: Can you explain what Simplify does and how it helps job seekers?

    A: I like to describe Simplify Copilot’s mission as giving every professional a personal talent agent. Athletes and musicians have agents dedicated to advancing their careers, so why shouldn’t the average professional have the same support? AI makes this possible. Simplify understands who you are, your career goals, and what you want to achieve, helping you get there. At its core, Simplify helps people find and apply for job opportunities. You create a profile, and we match you with jobs across the web while automating applications. That’s the vision behind what we’re building.

    Q: How does Simplify differentiate itself from other job search platforms like LinkedIn or Indeed?

    A: LinkedIn and Indeed are the two big players in the career space, but we all serve different roles. Indeed is essentially a job board where companies post jobs, and users apply. LinkedIn is more of a social network with a job search feature, but its focus is on professional connections. Simplify, on the other hand, is built entirely around the job seeker. You create a detailed profile, including your salary expectations, work history, skills and career goals, and we match you with the right opportunities. We also help generate resumes, cover letters and even apply on your behalf. Think of it as a full-spectrum job search Copilot, designed to guide you through the entire process, not just connect you to listings.

    Q: Do you think AI will replace traditional job-searching methods?

    A: I definitely think it will. AI has made it easier than ever to apply for jobs, generate resumes and write cover letters. But now, companies are also using AI to filter applicants. So in many cases, AI is essentially talking to AI to identify talent. I believe the future of job searching will come down to who has the most information on candidates. If I know you want to make $100,000, work in San Francisco and prefer a remote-friendly job, I can find better opportunities for you than any other platform. The real value won’t be in AI-generated applications or filtering, but it will be in the depth of data platforms have on job seekers and how much users trust them to find the right opportunities.

    Q: What new features or improvements can we expect from Simplify as AI continues to evolve?

    A: Our core features include job discovery, application autofill, and AI-generated resumes and cover letters. Next, we’re enhancing networking by showing users connections at companies they’re interested in. We’re also building career roadmaps, helping users set long-term goals, like moving from engineer to manager, with step-by-step guidance.

    Profile

    Name: Michael Yan

    Age: 24

    Position: Co-founder and CEO

    Education: Attended Stanford University in 2018, studying computer science, but left school in 2021 to start Simplify full-time.

    Residence: San Francisco

    ___

    © #YR@ MediaNews Group, Inc.

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Nigeria Defeat Togo In Handball Zonal Tournament Opening Match

    Nigeria’s U-18 Women’s Handball team started their IHF Trophy’s Zonal Phase championship in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire with an emphatic 53-21 victory over Togo in the Youth Category on Sunday.

    The team tutored by Coach John Uzor, and his deputy Coach Bukola Duru were swift and ruthless especially from the wings, and fast breaks as well as defending resolutely to win the first half 21-8.

    The second part of the match saw Nigeria continue in their amazing way there was really nothing the opponent could do as they finished the match with a commanding 53-21 victory.

    It was a surprise that despite the annihilating victory, none of the fantastic Nigeria girls were voted as MVP as the award went to a Togolese player.

    Coach John Uzor, though, said he wasn’t disappointed as the victory was enough to gratify him in his push to ensure his team make history in the competition.

    He said: “I am very excited about the victory. The Girls played to our instructions to the letter which enabled them to score so many goals. Whether their efforts were recognized or not is not my worry as the victory is much more important than the MVP award.”

    Nigeria’s Under 18 Women Handball team will play Burkina Faso on Monday at 9am while later in the day, Nigeria’s Under 20 Women Handball team will play their first match of the competition against Togo in the Junior category at 3pm.

    Nigeria Defeat Togo In Handball Zonal Tournament Opening Match is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

    Source: The Whistler

  • Easter: Police recover bus with arms in Onitsha

    Easter: Police recover bus with arms in Onitsha

    By Ovat Abeng

    Police operatives attached to Fegge Divisional Headquarters in Onitsha, Anambra State have recovered a bus with arms concealed inside a rice bag.

    The State Police Public Relations Officer SP Tochukwu Ikenga who disclosed this in a statement in Awka on Saturday said the operatives at about 1.30 pm on 17th April 2025, while on patrol, intercepted a bus parked suspiciously along Port Harcourt Road, Upper Iweka, Onitsha, during a search of the bus, they found a bag of rice containing five pump action guns, eight live cartridges and two handcuffs neatly concealed in it.

    The arms and the bus were recovered, and investigations are still ongoing to unmask the culprits.

    Furthermore, the Operatives of the Rapid Response Squad/Anti- kidnapping Unit acting on credible information on 17th April 2025 by 1.27 pm arrested one Israel Akachukwu ‘m’ aged 25 years, recovered two pump action guns, two live cartridges, one cutlass, one yellow axe and a dagger in his apartment at Ezeigwe Street Nkpor, Idemili North LGA.

    Read Also: NDLEA intercepts cocaine in Saudi-bound religious books, arrests bandits’ supplier with drugs in private part

    The suspect confessed to being a member of the Viking’s Confraternity and is already working with the Operatives to arrest other gang members.

    “To this end, the State Commissioner of Police, CP Ikioye Orutugu, while encouraging the people to be law-abiding, vigilant and security conscious at all times noted that the operation is part of Command’s commitment to ensure that residents/visitors feel safe and to nip to the bud any untoward situation during the 2025 Easter celebration in the state.

    The CP also advocates for the emulation of Christ’s humility and selfless lifestyle and urged the people to used the period of the festivity to pray for the peace and security of the State and the country at large.

  • 49ers draft preview: Pass-rush partner needed opposite Bosa … again

    SANTA CLARA – Picture this: Nick Bosa bursts off one side of the 49ers’ rebuilt defensive line, Yetur Gross-Matos shifts inside to come up the gut and a hot-shot rookie speeds in from the other defensive end spot as they all collapse the pocket.

    And who will that rookie be?

    That is for the 49ers to discover, presumably with their first-round draft pick come Thursday night, April 24.

    Bosa remains their premier defensive lineman, but it’s now by default.

    The 49ers’ offseason purge saw them release the trio that started next to Bosa in last season’s opener – Javon Hargrave, Maliek Collins and Leonard Floyd.

    To maximize Bosa’s production, the 49ers are back to their annual search for a complementary defensive end. In recent years, they have run through Dee Ford, Kerry Hyder, Arden Key, Charles Omenihu, Samson Ebukam, Clelin Ferrell, Randy Gregory, Chase Young and Floyd.

    Floyd was a 17-game starter in his lone 49ers season, but outweighing his durability and 8 ½ sacks were this year’s $1.5 million in salary cap savings.

    Floyd came aboard last year on a two-year deal, as did Gross-Matos, who’s now penciled in as the starter opposite Bosa. Gross-Matos overcame a preseason knee injury and had a three-sack outburst in the 49ers’ final win last season (over the Bears), but his versatility to shift inside on pass downs creates the need for a certified speed demon on the edge.

    Once the 49ers passed on drafting a defensive end last year, their rationale was this, as explained then by co-director of player personnel R.J. Gillen: “With how we saw the board developing and going into draft meetings, where we were picking, there were gaps in the board at that position, so that was a position we decided to attack in free agency.”

    Now they must attack in this draft, and here are five candidates they may consider at No. 11 overall, with the first of their 11 picks:

    Abdul Carter, Penn State

    6-foot-4, 250 pounds

    He could go as high as the No. 2 overall pick, unless his stock tanks as a result of shoulder and foot injuries. His edge-rushing prowess showed last year with 12 ½ sacks, 66 pressures and 23 1/2 tackles for loss.

    James Pearce Jr., Tennessee

    6-5, 252 pounds

    He ranked first at the combine among edge rushers with a 10-second split of 1.56 seconds. His lean, relentless frame might remind some of Aldon Smith (No. 7 pick in 2011). The No. 11 pick may be too high for him, and the second round may be too late.

    Shemar Stewart, Texas A&M

    6-5, 267 pounds

    He had only 1 ½ sacks each of the past three seasons, so the 49ers would be gambling on his potential to finish better and complement the similarly sized Bosa (6-4, 266 pounds). But Stewart’s tenacity in run support can’t be overlooked in the 49ers’ reboot.

    Mykel Williams, Georgia

    6-5, 267

    Is he a read-and-react defensive end or the 49ers’ preferred get-the-heck-off sprinter? He ran a 4.7-second 40-yard dash at his pro day, which wouldn’t have cracked the top-10 among edge rushers at the combine.

    Mike Green, Marshall

    6-3, 251 pounds

    His size is similar to Dee Ford, the 49ers’ 2019 bookend opposite of Bosa. He made second-team All-America last season (17 sacks), having transferred to Marshall in the wake of sexual-assault allegations at Virginia. He excelled in the Senior Bowl, where 49ers assistant K.J. Wright was working with the defensive linemen.

    Roll call: Donovan Ezeiruaku (Boston College), Landon Jackson (Arkansas), JT Tuimoloau (Ohio State), Jordan Burch (Oregon), Jack Sawyer (Ohio State)

    Source: Paradise Post

  • Maximilian Dood speculates on potential hints for Marvel vs. Capcom 4 with the Marvel vs. Capcom Fighting Collection











    It’s been nearly eight years since Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite was released. Of course, some fans might not even count Infinite as truly being part of the MvC series since it felt so different from previous entries. For those fans, it’s been over 13 years since Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 was released.






    Though it’s been a long wait, we’re now seeing signs that Marvel and Capcom are willing to collaborate again with the Marvel vs. Capcom Fighting Collection: Arcade Classics. It’s interesting to note that the collection recently released a new patch.









    Perhaps the most unexpected thing about this patch is that it introduced new Marvel vs. Capcom themed artwork. It certainly is curious that Capcom is creating new artwork for games that were released over 25 years ago at this point.


    Additionally, the latest patch added a total of four new songs to the game’s album. In one of his latest videos, Maximilian Dood highlights these points as being potential hints that Marvel vs. Capcom 4 could actually be in the cards.


    Needless to say, Maximilian does a real deep dive into a number of possibilities. For example, the fourth song in the album is titled “Credits: Promise of Reunion.”


    While all of this might be coming off as a “tin foil hat conspiracy theory,” there actually is precedent for Capcom doing this sort of thing before. Notably, Capcom released conceptual artwork for Mega Man 11 in Mega Man Legacy Collection 2.


    At the time, Mega Man 11 hadn’t even been announced yet. Fans speculated that Capcom was hinting that a new Mega Man entry was in production with this mysterious artwork included in the collection. This theory turned out to be true.


    Check it all out in the video below:









    Source: Event Hubs

  • Religious freedom, migration on agenda as Vance meets Cardinal Parolin

    Against the backdrop of deep differences with the Trump administration over migration and foreign aid as well as concerns for Ukraine and for Gaza, the Vatican secretary of state welcomed U.S. Vice President JD Vance to the Vatican.

    Vance met with Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, and with Archbishop Paul R. Gallagher, the Vatican foreign minister, April 19 in the Apostolic Palace.

    A Vatican statement said areas of agreement, such as the defense of religious freedom, as well as the areas of tension with the Trump administration were discussed.

    “There was an exchange of opinions on the international situation, especially regarding countries affected by war, political tensions and difficult humanitarian situations, with particular attention to migrants, refugees and prisoners,” the Vatican statement said.

    While “other issues of mutual interest were also discussed,” the Vatican said that “hope was expressed for serene collaboration between the State and the Catholic Church in the United States, whose valuable service to the most vulnerable people was acknowledged.”

    The vice president arrived at the Vatican with his wife, Usha, and three children: Ewan, Vivek and Mirabel. Cardinal Parolin greeted all of them before holding talks with Vance and his entourage.

    After their meeting, the Vance family was given a tour of the Apostolic Palace and the Sistine Chapel.

    “Oh, wow, look how beautiful this is,” Vance could be heard saying on a Vatican video clip as he got out of the elevator when he arrived in the building. He also could be heard saying he was proud of his children because “they mostly held it together” during the long Vatican Good Friday liturgy.

    Vance was in Rome for talks with the Italian government and, with his family, was visiting tourist sites in the city and participating in Holy Week and Easter services. The Vance family attended the Liturgy of the Lord’s Passion in St. Peter’s Basilica April 18 and was expected to attend Easter morning Mass in St. Peter’s Square April 20.

    A quick encounter with Pope Francis was possible Easter morning but was not scheduled officially as the pope continues to recover after a long hospitalization.

    The pope, in a letter to U.S. bishops in early February, strongly supported their traditional assistance to migrants and refugees and criticized threats and policies of “mass deportations” announced by Trump and vigorously defended by Vance.

    Pope Francis had described Trump’s immigration policy as a “major crisis.”

    Every nation has the right to defend itself and keep its communities safe “from those who have committed violent or serious crimes while in the country or prior to arrival,” the pope had written. However, “the act of deporting people who in many cases have left their own land for reasons of extreme poverty, insecurity, exploitation, persecution or serious deterioration of the environment, damages the dignity of many men and women, and of entire families, and places them in a state of particular vulnerability and defenselessness.”

    In a January interview, Vance, who joined the Catholic Church in 2019, questioned the motives of the U.S. bishops’ criticism of Trump’s immigration policies, suggesting their objection to the suspension of a federal refugee resettlement program had to do with “their bottom line.”

    The pope and the U.S. bishops noted that helping the stranger is a Gospel tenet and, the bishops said, their work with refugees cost more than the government grants covered.

    Pope Francis’ February letter also responded to an assertion Vance made in a Fox News interview about the Catholic concept of “ordo amoris” (the order of love or charity).

    The concept, Vance said, teaches that “you love your family, and then you love your neighbor, and then you love your community, and then you love your fellow citizens in your own country. And then after that, you can focus and prioritize the rest of the world.”

    However, the pope said, “Christian love is not a concentric expansion of interests that little by little extend to other persons and groups. In other words: the human person is not a mere individual, relatively expansive, with some philanthropic feelings!”

    In an interview with the Italian newspaper La Repubblica April 18, Cardinal Parolin said the Vatican supported approaching global problems with “multilateralism and a policy based on cooperation among states, international law and diplomacy, rather than on opposition and the logic of power.”

    Asked about the Trump administration’s growing frustration at not ending Russia’s war on Ukraine, a frustration that seems focused on Ukraine’s unwillingness to cede territory, Cardinal Parolin responded, “As Pope Francis has repeatedly reminded us, peace cannot be imposed, it is built patiently, day after day, through dialogue and mutual respect.”

    At the same time, the cardinal said, “anything that promotes a just and lasting peace is to be considered helpful.”

    Cardinal Parolin also was asked about Israel’s continuing bombardment of Gaza and Trump’s remarks that Palestinians whose homes have been destroyed in Gaza should be resettled elsewhere and the territory turned into a “Riviera.”

    “For the Holy See,” the cardinal said, “the principles of the social doctrine of the church remain clear: Self-defense is lawful, but it can never imply the total or partial annihilation of another people or the denial of their right to live in their own land.”

    Source: Angelus News

  • Store Manager at House of Maryjane April, 2025

    Click Here To Apply

  • Pharmaceutical Buyer at Melomed Private Hospitals April, 2025

    Click Here To Apply

  • NDLEA intercepts cocaine in Saudi-bound religious books, arrests bandits’ supplier with drugs in private part

    A cocaine consignment consisting of 20 parcels with a total weight of 500grams and buried in the pages of the religious books was uncovered at a courier company in Lagos on Tuesday 15th April 2025 when NDLEA officers of the Directorate of Operations and General Investigation (DOGI) were searching through export cargos going to Saudi Arabia at the logistics firm.

     

    A statement released by NDLEA spokesperson, Femi Babafemi, says at another courier company same day, NDLEA officers intercepted five parcels of Loud, a strong strain of cannabis weighing 2.8 kilograms hidden in a carton coming from the United States of America.

     

    NDLEA intercepts cocaine in Saudi-bound religious books, arrests bandits? supplier with drugs in private part

     

    Babafemi mentioned that in Kano, a 22-year-old supplier of illicit substances to bandits, Muhammad Mohammed, has been arrested by NDLEA operatives on patrol along Bichi – Kano road while heading to Katsina with 277 ampoules of pentazocine injection tied to his thigh and private part with cellotape. 

     

    According to the statement, Mohammed was intercepted on Sunday 13th April, while another suspect, Mohammed Abdulrahman Abdulaziz, 43, was nabbed same day at Research Rimin Kebe area of Nasarawa, Kano with 68 blocks of skunk, a strain of cannabis, weighing 30kg.

     

    Babafemi added that at the Tincan seaport in Lagos, a suspect Basorun Usman Kayode, 40, who has been at large for two years was arrested by NDLEA officers in connection with the seizure of 107kg Loud imported from Cannada in 2023, while another suspect, Dauda Yakubu who distributes illicit drugs within the seaport community was arrested by a team of operatives on Monday 14th April.

     

     

    Source: Linda Ikeji

  • ‘Nigeria Is Burial Ground For Good-Intentioned People’ —Sowore Speaks On Power Politics, Peter Obi’s Packaging, #EndSARS Fallout, Others

     

    Human rights activist and former presidential candidate of the African Action Congress (AAC) Omoyele Sowore has said he refuses to compromise his values for political gain, warning that Nigeria has become “a burial ground for good-intentioned people” where evil is more likely to thrive than virtue.

     

    During an interview on Noble Nigeria hosted by Noble Eyisi, Sowore explained his principled stance on not aligning with political godfathers in order to win power.

     

    “It’s not just about gaining power to do good,” Sowore said. “I want to gain power to sustain good people who have gained power thinking they can do good. But Nigeria consumes them. Evil has taken over this country… not in a religious sense, but general evil.”

     

    “No Consequences for Doing Evil in Nigeria”

     

    Sowore lamented the lack of accountability in Nigeria’s political system, suggesting that the country rewards the corrupt while punishing the upright.

     

    “The only consequences we have here are against those who do good, not those who do evil,” he said. “All the evil men I’ve known since I was born have lasted longer than the good ones. They build the best mansions, drive the nicest cars. But every weekend, you hear a good man is dead — the teacher who did his work, the honest policeman, the customs officer who didn’t take a bribe.”

     

    He added that good people often die in poverty or disgrace, while the corrupt thrive in comfort and power.

     

    When asked whether he still believes he could become president one day, Sowore recalled the many unlikely twists in his life and political journey, emphasising that while he is a “fundamental pessimist,” he still holds on to hope.

     

    “If you sat with me in 1994, you would swear I’d never graduate. But I did. If anyone told you I’d live beyond 25, you wouldn’t believe it. I’m 54 now,” he said. “Stuff can happen in such a way that it’s not just me — a lot of people could rise. Abacha died suddenly, and the same can happen again.”

     

    ‘Peter Obi Was Packaged by the Elite’

     

    On the subject of Peter Obi, Sowore was unflinching. He described the former Anambra State governor as a “packaged” candidate promoted by the elite to hijack the energy of the #EndSARS movement.

     

    “After #EndSARS, the youth were ripe for power. But the elites knew they had to insert someone they could talk to,” Sowore claimed. “So they gave them Obi, and it was all packaging.”

     

    According to Sowore, Obi is not the revolutionary some people think he is.

     

    Sowore also accused Obi’s supporters of waging an aggressive information campaign and using social media to silence dissenting voices.

     

    “Obi was portrayed as the face of the youth struggle, but it was a tyranny of the minority,” he said. “Even Wole Soyinka told me he almost fell for it up to a point. He said I was almost endorsing this guy. And then he woke up one day and his name was all over, and he said he was asking, what did I do wrong? What did I do wrong? It turns out they just picked on him for no reason. And even though he didn’t participate in the election, he became the most ridiculed person after the election. That was what got him upset. And he said, ‘Oh, if this is my last assignment on earth, I’m going to let people know who you people are.’”

     

    Recounting his own encounters with Obi, Sowore shared personal stories of what he described as hypocrisy and stagecraft.

     

    “When we were running for election, I noticed something about him. If Peter wants to take a private jet, he will go and enter through commercial place and greet everybody. You think? And then they will bring a vehicle and put him to go to the private jet area,” he said.

     

    He narrated how Obi would then switch to the VIP lounge for a private jet.

     

    “I was actually expecting that he was driving Innoson motors,” he said.

     

    “Peter Obi had nothing less than 10 big Toyota SUVs waiting for him. And I was telling myself, why do you have to lie? So why do you have to cover up for this? Nobody’s going to be upset with you that you are a presidential candidate if you have a convoy.

     

    “But look at this trajectory, and that packaging is his style. And if you want to get away with finding out, then he’ll send his people after you.”

     

    “I knew him and he knew that I knew him. But there were guys who were against him in those days who didn’t have the courage to come out again, because they were afraid of the backlash, and they did a fantastic job of scaring everybody,” he said.

     

    Sowore narrated how Obi once publicly praised him for helping him become governor, but later allowed his associates to smear him and novelist Okey Ndibe with false accusations.

     

    “They printed posters in Anambra calling us gay partners,” he recalled. “That’s when I knew he endorses those rabid online attacks.”

     

    “Information Warfare Worse Than Military Rule”

     

    Sowore warned that the political atmosphere in Nigeria had become dangerously intolerant, comparing the media manipulation around Obi’s rise to tactics seen during the civil war and military rule.

     

    “But there were guys who were against him (Obi) in those days who didn’t have the courage to come out again, because they were afraid of the backlash, and they did a fantastic job of scaring everybody,” he said.

     

    He added that many of the youth leaders from EndSARS had been co-opted or silenced, naming popular activists and entertainers who allegedly supported the elite’s plan.

     

    Sowore called for deeper political awareness and philosophical resistance.

     

    During the interview, Sowore bared the emotional costs of his prolonged state-imposed exile—on his family, his marriage, and himself. He spoke not just as a political figure long vilified by Nigeria’s ruling class, but as a father, a husband, and a man haunted by a childhood vow made under siege.

     

    Asked how his prolonged absence, compounded by the Nigerian government’s seizure of his passport between 2019 and 2024, impacted his family, Sowore was candid. “I don’t think there’s a replacement anywhere for the presence of a father or a mom,” he said. “You just hope that your family members are not collateral damage or damages to that mission.”

     

    His children, especially, had grown into new people during his time away. His daughter had aged from 13 to 17, welcoming him back with cheerful indifference.

     

    His son, more emotionally affected, struggled to reconnect at first. “He would look at me with some kind of surprise in his eyes and walk away,” Sowore recalled. Yet slowly, through shared rides, casual teasing, and “man-to-man” talks, the bonds began to reform.

     

    “We started jiving again,” he said. “We engaged a few times and then started talking about serious things.”

     

    Yet Sowore refused to sugarcoat his limitations. “I have no excuses,” he said, when asked if he felt his absence had robbed his children of the guidance he had wished for as a boy. While grateful for technology—video chats and long-distance conversations—he acknowledged that physical presence could never be truly substituted.

     

    Sowore sees himself as a different kind of father—one who listens, who allows, who lets his children explore their identities.

     

    “They could ask me to shut up, and I’ll be fine with it,” he said with a chuckle, contrasting that with his own upbringing where dissenting from a father’s wish was “an abomination.”

     

    Reflecting on his marriage, Sowore did not shy away from self-critique.

     

    “Sometimes I even think it’s unfair for people like me to get married,” he said solemnly. “Because I kind of knew that I came into this world to live a life of uncertainty. And marriage requires a lot of stability and certainty.”

     

    His wife, whom he praised as “extraordinarily strong,” bore the brunt of his absences and the fear that he might not come back alive.

     

    “Every morning she heard either directly or indirectly that the police had beaten me up or roughed me up,” he said. Her relief at his return was short-lived, replaced quickly with reality. “Your wife can tolerate you being on vacation for a long time,” he laughed, “but the moment you arrive, work starts.”

     

    The couple and their kids tried to recalibrate during a vacation to Barbados, where Sowore had to learn the “ABC of fatherhood again.” He laughed at his kids’ response to his changed accent: “I want you to go and bring me water.” “You mean ‘water’?” they would ask, correcting him playfully.

     

    When asked about the source of his rebellious spirit, Sowore traced it back to a defining childhood moment. At the age of ten, during Christmas week, a violent police raid on his village left a deep psychological scar.

     

    “That was our happiest week as villagers,” he recalled. “And then the police came in… and raided the village at night. It was terrible.”

     

    He described watching his father hide in the ceiling—“the man I thought was courageous”—while women and girls in the village, including his own cousin, were assaulted. “She never recovered,” he said. “She just died recently of stroke.”

     

    That night changed him forever. “With where I was, I was 10 years old, and I swore by whatever was out there that if I made it out of here alive, I’d fight not to let this happen again,” Sowore said. “That was the promise of a 10-year-old.”

     

    From a childhood vow in a raided village to decades of activism, arrests, and state-imposed exile, Sowore’s life has been anything but ordinary.

     

    “I’m not trying to fit into anybody’s box,” he said. “Otherwise, I would have been born as ice cream to make people happy.”

    Source: Sahara Reporters