Bed 26: A Memoir of an African Man’S Asylum in the United States

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Xlibris Corporation, Mar 8, 2018 - Fiction - 90 pages
My life, as you will read, has taken me from one place to another. Bed 26 is the story of how I fought my way out of constant persecution and reclaimed my freedom. It is my hope that by sharing my experience and my pain, you will begin to understand why people are forced to immigrate. This is a revealing memoir and empowering manifesto, with contributions from other asylees, refugees, and Nigerians. Nong Richie was born in one country and came of age in another more visible placeNigeria. In a strange world where he was continually persecuted, living soon became a personal nightmare of constant mob attacks and deaths of his friends to HIV. Nong escaped into the world of his mind from the expository details of the war he suffered as a child and high-profile attacks against gay Nigerians. Every detail of his personal life became public, and the realities of an inherently unlawful society emerged with every script of this book. The detention center packaged his trauma as a bombshell, hijacking his image and identity and making profit from every night he spent in it. Bed 26 is his raw, honest, and poignant accounta no-holds-barred, pull-no-punches account for the persecution of him and his community. He was a fearless activist and an unstoppable force for change who was determined to expose the truth. The target demographics of this book are clients of Immigration Equality, immigrants, refugees, asylum seekers, attorneys representing Immigration Equality, clients and volunteers of First Friends, Eat Offbeat clients, and the network of mine from the United Nations department of NGOs.
 

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Contents

Acknowledgment
The Day I Met My Doom
My Escape
Bed 26
Setbacks
Freedom in Disguise
The Agony of Being Gay in Nigeria
Life after Detention
Copyright

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About the author (2018)

At 27 years Edafe Okporo has experienced more than most people twice his age. Born in Warri, Nigeria, Edafe grew up with one brother and two sisters, lived with his mother after she survived a devastated treatment with his father in an environment ridden with poverty, surrounded by people who were abusive, leaving him displaced. Award winning human right activist Edafe gained refugee status in America after arriving in New York a week before the presidential election of President Trump, in an unpredictable time of political turmoil. He experienced hardship in detention center and is now a free man advocating for the rights of minorities.

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