Growing up in a polygamous family in Benin City, her mother
actively discouraged her from following her dreams, sometimes beating
her when she would be out tinkering with an engine instead of doing her
chores in the kitchen.
But Sandra is the sort of woman that responds well to adversary.
"The constraints, the obstacles, the challenges that could have
driven me back, they became my opportunity. The future looks bright," she says.
She has built a network of female mechanics that is spreading from
city to city, and training former sex workers, orphans, and victims of
trafficking to be mechanics.
Sandra believes that women are better suited to high quality,
technical work on motor vehicles. "Our clients keep coming back - they
prefer us because we are determined to be better than a lot of mechanics
who take their job and their salary for granted," she says.
Sandra's Lady Mechanic Initiative has now spread to the north with
its first project in Kano City where the response from Muslim women has
been unprecedented.
"My Nigeria is the giant of Africa.... My Nigeria is the first
to the produce first woman mechanics in Africa. My Nigeria is where you
find lots of women doing male-dominated professions. My Nigeria's women
are strong women," she told Aljazeera.
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