Wesu Lokossu Fabian
At age 15, Wesu Fabian is finally starting school.
For most children, the first day of school happens at age 4 or 5.
For Wesu Lokossu Fabian, it happened at 15.
For years, Wesu’s world was a small wooden stall in the heart of Makoko, where she helped her mother sell noodles to support her family. She had once been a pupil, but when her mother gave birth and needed help caring for her younger sibling and running the business, Wesu stepped in. School stopped. Time moved on.
In communities like hers, when survival is the priority, education often becomes a luxury. And like many girls around her, the weight of family responsibilities pushed Wesu out of school long before she ever had a chance to truly begin.
But in 2023, everything changed.
During Slum2School’s enrollment drive, Wesu was identified as one of the many girls who had dropped out of school, not because of lack of interest, but because life had demanded sacrifice. When she was enrolled, her age placed her in an unusual situation: while she should have been in upper primary, she had never completed the foundational levels. And so, at 15 years old, Wesu began Primary 1 so she could rebuild her academic foundation.
Some would have seen this as a setback.
Wesu saw it as an opportunity.
Her teachers, Mrs. Sevo and Ms. Anifat, immediately recognized her determination. They onboarded her onto the Slum2School remedial program, personalized to help her catch up – early mornings, extra lessons, simplified modules, and constant encouragement. What they discovered surprised everyone: Wesu was a fast learner. She absorbed concepts quickly, asked thoughtful questions, and pushed through every challenge with quiet confidence. Even when her peers paused, Wesu kept going.
By the end of the school year, in what can only be described as extraordinary progress, she had moved from Primary 1 to Primary 5, a leap that reflected not only the power of structured learning but the strength of a child determined to reclaim her future.
Today, in the 2024/2025 academic session, Wesu is thriving in Primary 5.
Her teacher, Mrs. Damilola, describes her as “a keen learner who consistently scores 65% or higher and refuses to let anything stop her”, a remarkable achievement for a learner who, just a year earlier, had been completely out of the education system.
Wesu dreams big.
She talks about challenging herself with the Common Entrance Examination, boldly choosing to test herself against a national academic standard she once believed was out of reach.
She talks about becoming an entrepreneur someday.
She talks about a future that once seemed impossible.
Beyond academics, Wesu is vibrant and full of life, she loves dancing, hairstyling, and learning new things. And with every passing day, she walks with a confidence that comes from finally being seen, supported, and given the tools to succeed.
When asked what she would say to her teachers if she could say only one thing, her words were simple, heartfelt, and telling of her journey:
“Thank you for teaching me in a way that is easy to understand.”
For a girl who waited 15 years to start school, learning isn’t just education – it’s freedom, dignity, and a second chance.
Wesu’s story is more than a testimony of academic acceleration; it is a reminder of what becomes possible when children are given access to education, teachers who believe in them, and a community that cheers them on.
And this is what Slum2School makes possible for every child, every single day.
