Success Adegor Biography, Age, Wiki, Parents, Father, Mother: Godwin Adegor, Vera Adegor

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Dem Go Flog Tire Saga: All You Should Know About Success Adegor, The Sapele Schoolgirl Girl In Viral Video 


Success Adegor Bio, Wiki, Wikipedia, 

Who Is Success Adegor? 

How Old Is Success Adegor? 

Meet Success Adegor: Parents, Father Godwin Adegor, Mother Vera Adegor, Birthday, 7-year-old Primary 3 pupil in Okotie–Eboh Primary School, Sapele The Stephanie Rukevwe Idolor Connection. 




Fun Video of Success Adegor, a pupil of Okotie-Eboh Primary School I, Sapele, who was chased from school over exams levy has later turned the 7-year-old Sapele Schoolgirl into a celebrity.

‘A play-play matter’ later turned into a serious issue of high profile intervention as visitors continue to troop to the residence of Mr and Mrs Godwin Adegor since the ‘play-play’ video went viral on Facebook.

DAILY INDEPENDENT visited Success Adegor and reports about the current situation.

Like every success story, the crowd of goodwill visitors, government personnel, NGOs and a host of other public-spirited persons continue to swell by the day.
Calls from far and near poured in from those who just want to identify with the little girl who had before now lived a low profile life with her parents at an obscure ghetto area of Sapele called Urban Area.

Meanwhile, Miss Stephanie Rukevwe Idolor, an HND holder from Auchi Polytechnic, Edo State, who took the video shot of the little girl and upload it on Facebook, said she did it out of fun.

She remarked that “the pitiable sight of Miss Adegor, who was terribly bitter and soliloquising, while walking back home, attracted me to her, and when she narrated her story, I took it from there.
“I thank God for what happened and I appreciate all the personalities that responded including the Ministry of Basic and Secondary Education.
“Imagine a young girl talking to herself in that bitter state of mind? Anything could have happened; God only used me,” Idolor said.

Adegor, the seven-year-old Primary 3 pupil, who never dreamt of her newfound status, seems to enjoy every moment of the unforgettable event as she is always at home with every visitors, no matter how highly placed but with a message that when she grows up she wants to be a lawyer.

With that mindset, many of her new found admirers believed that the case of Success was that of divine providence to fulfil the young girl’s destiny, and as such, provisions had been made for her to have an unhindered education right to the university level.

At seven, Miss Adegor possesses the charm, character and wisdom of a twelve-year-old. She is vibrant, intelligent, outspoken and bold. It is her boldness and love for education that announced her to the world.


However, since the incident happened, Miss Success, who admitted being a slow writer, said she has only one regret, and that is she can’t observe her break time anymore.


When asked to narrate what happened, she said: “The day I was chased from school, my mother had promised to give me the money to pay for the exams levy the following Monday. So I never expected that the headmistress would ask me to go home despite a plea from my mother. It pained me so much that I became sad and sober as I walked home to tell my mother.
“So on my way, I met our neighbour who asked me why I was not in school and when I told her what happened, she brought out her phone, recorded my conversation and uploaded it on Facebook. That was the beginning of my story from obscurity and poverty to stardom. I can’t even remember anymore the number of personalities that have visited me in this poor environment.


“I am indeed humbled and grateful to God for his faithfulness, amazing grace and blessings upon my family. I thank the governor, chairman, well-meaning Nigerians and organisations that have intervened in my situation. I love them all. I have also forgiven my headmistress, Mrs Vero Igbigwe, for chasing me from school because of exams levy. It wasn’t her fault that my parents are poor. All the pains in my heart that day had become a melody.

“The bible says we should honour our father and our mother so that our days may be long. Apart from my biological parents, Mrs Vero Igbigwe is my mother and I love her. I and my siblings can now go to school and fulfil our destinies,” she said.



Meanwhile, Mrs Vera Adegor, the mother of little Success, has expressed gratitude to the Delta State governor, Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, Commissioner for Education, Chiedu Ebie, Chairman of Sapele Local Government Area, Eugene Unuaghan, and other public-spirited persons too numerous to mention for their prompt intervention and show of love.

In an emotion-laden voice, Mrs Adegor, in an interview with DAILY INDEPENDENT, said, “first and foremost, my husband, children and I wish to use this medium to express our profound gratitude to His Excellency, Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, governor of Delta State; the Hon. Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education, Mr Chiedu Ebie; Chairman of Sapele Local Government Area, Hon. Eugene Unuaghan, other public-spirited persons; NGO’s and others too numerous to mention for their intervention and support. We thank you all, we appreciate you and we love you for looking after us; the glory of God will not depart from you.”

She also added that Governor Okowa and his team are indeed friends of the poor whom God has used to lift her family out of abject poverty.

The petty trader-mother of three of which Miss Success is the last child and who had been married to her husband for 15 years, said further: “The whole episode was divine intervention. God only used what happened to uplift my husband and I. Or how else do you want me to tell my story?

“Just a few days ago, I was struggling to pay my children’s school fees from the little savings of my petty trade and my husband is an Okada rider. Just then, God intervened. One moment of ‘go home until you pay your exams fee’ by the headmistress of my daughter’s school and the viral video that followed suit changed our story from zero to hero.

“Today, Success is on scholarship and that has reduced our burden to concentrate on the other two children in secondary school. People who ordinarily would never have come to our house because of poverty are now our friends coming to us in drove. I cannot appreciate God enough.”

Miss Success’ father, Mr Godwin Adegor, in an interview, described the success story of Success as a finger of God.

He noted that life has not been easy for him and his young family, remarking that there was a threat of quit notice from his landlord for their inability to pay the rent of the mud house they stay.
He explained that he was struggling to gather money to pay the children’s school levies before God, in split seconds, changed their story.
“I appreciate all Nigerians. Now, I understand the true meaning of the miracle. My dream is to see my children to the highest level of education,” the father of three said.




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