Abubakar Danraka, PhD🇳🇬
2.5K posts

Abubakar Danraka, PhD🇳🇬
@PharmDas
Pharmacist|Health Sociologist|Drug Prod. & Quality Assurance Specialist|Public Analyst|Visionary Leader|Common Humanity. Views are mine, RTs aren't endorsements
Abuja, Nigeria Katılım Eylül 2011
570 Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler


Watch the @KAFTAN_TV
Report of the @psnabuja
#WorldMalariaDay2026 Community Health Outreach
youtu.be/r6p5SG3s0s8?si…

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Abuja was originally conceptualised by Gen Murtala Mohammed in 1975, but building started under Shagari.
Shagari built Area 1 and 2.
Buhari did not develop Abuja as military head of state.
IBB largely built Abuja , he built Area 3, 7, 8 ,10 and 11. He also built Wuse zone 1-7 and also Asokoro and Maitama.
Abacha built most of central area, Wuse 2 and Garki 2. Gwarinpa Estate which is the largest housing project was also built by Abacha
The only thing Abdulsalam built was Eagle Square.
Obasanjo build Utako, Wuye and Jabi and he must also be credit for licencing private mass housing in Abuja , the first of many estate to come to fruition was Prince and Princess estate where incidentally I bought my first house.
Development of Abuja is now mainly private sector driven .
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@drfatima84 Congratulations and wishing you a very successful tenure inshallah
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Abubakar Danraka, PhD🇳🇬 retweetledi

1
Do all calculations Left to Right.
Since, Multiplication and Division have higher precedence than addition and subtration.
Now, between multiplication and division we'll do Left to Right. So,
4x4=16
16/4=4
Since addition and subtraction are at same precedence level so again we'll do Left to right
4+1=5
5-4=1
1 is the answer.

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Watch the @NTANewsNow International Global Health Digest on MEDICAL NEGLIGENCE
youtube.com/live/OIxIatYnd…

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So humbled and grateful to the Almighty God to receive the Meritorious Award and Medal of Honour presented by the Ansaruddeen Society of Nigeria Mararaba Branch Division III Abuja in recognition for public health enlightenment and dedicated service to humanity.
@muslimnews_NG




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May the Almighty God bring the restoration of peace, harmony & brotherly neighborliness across communities in all troubled states @GovNigeria.
May He the Omnipotent & Omniscient hasten the healing of our grieving families, our land & nation by His special mercies & grace. #Naija

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@MrPitbull07 Common Humanity and enduring service to humanity
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"She saved a stranger’s child with $15. Decades later, she discovered why he had been searching for her.
In 1982, a Kenyan boy named Chris Mburu stood on the brink of losing everything. He was the brightest student in his rural district, studying by lamplight inside an earthen house without electricity. But his family could not afford his school fees. Without help, his education would end — along with any chance of escaping a life spent picking coffee in the fields.
Meanwhile, across the world in Sweden, an 80-year-old kindergarten teacher named Hilde Back came across a notice for a child sponsorship program. She chose a name from a list: Chris Mburu, Kenya. She began sending $15 every school term. There was no recognition, no expectation of gratitude — just a quiet decision to help a child she believed she would never meet.
That small amount changed everything.
Chris stayed in school. Over time, he and Hilde exchanged letters. She asked about his teachers, his studies, and his dreams. Through her words, he realized she wasn’t just part of an organization. She was a real person who believed in him. And he never forgot her.
Chris eventually graduated at the top of his law class at the University of Nairobi. He later earned a Fulbright scholarship to Harvard. He went on to become a United Nations human rights lawyer, helping prosecute genocide and crimes against humanity around the world.
Yet one thing always weighed on his heart. He had never properly thanked the woman who made his journey possible. In truth, he barely knew who she was.
In 2001, Chris founded a scholarship program for children like himself — talented students from poor families whose potential might otherwise be lost. He asked the Swedish Ambassador in Kenya to help him locate his mysterious sponsor so he could name the foundation after her.
They found her. Hilde Back. Still alive. Still living quietly in Sweden.
Chris traveled to meet her for the first time. He expected to meet a wealthy philanthropist. Instead, he found a humble, warm woman living simply — genuinely surprised that anyone considered her actions remarkable.
Then filmmaker Jennifer Arnold began documenting their reunion. During her research, she uncovered something Hilde had never told Chris.
Hilde Back had not been born in Sweden. She was born in Nazi Germany in 1922 to a Jewish family. At sixteen, when Hitler’s Nuremberg Laws banned Jewish children from attending school, strangers helped smuggle her to Sweden. Her parents stayed behind because Sweden’s refugee policies did not allow older Jews to enter. Both were later sent to concentration camps. Her father died there. Her mother disappeared, never to be heard from again.
Hilde survived the Holocaust because strangers helped her escape. She lost her own education because of who she was.
Fifty years later, she quietly paid for the education of a child across the world — a child who would grow up to fight the same hatred that destroyed her family.
When Chris learned her story, he wept. Hilde, meanwhile, had no idea that the boy she sponsored had devoted his life to prosecuting genocide.
In 2003, Hilde traveled to Kenya for the inauguration of the Hilde Back Education Fund. The entire village welcomed her as an honorary elder. In 2012, she returned again to celebrate her 90th birthday, surrounded by hundreds of children whose futures had been transformed through her generosity.
Hilde Back passed away on January 13, 2021, at the age of 98.
Today, the Hilde Back Education Fund has supported nearly 1,000 Kenyan children in continuing their education. Many have graduated from universities around the world. Many now give back — mentoring younger students and contributing monthly donations to support the next generation.
One woman. Fifteen dollars. One child.
That child created a foundation. That foundation changed hundreds of lives. And those lives continue to change others.

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