Cameroonian educator’s first book tells story of overcoming hardship, aims to inspire children

After leaving Cameroon and coming to Korea more than 25 years ago, Chrysanthus Fogha Caspa recently published his first-ever book in English and Korean in January. Titled “I Want to Go to College,” the book is a memoir aimed at motivating children — especially young Africans in Korea, on the African continent and beyond. It recounts the author’s journey of pursuing a college education against all odds, overcoming discrimination and other obstacles, before ultimately migrating halfway around the world to Korea, an unfamiliar country. Though published recently, Caspa says the book has been forming inside him since he was 7 years old, the age at which he lost his mother. “Her death marked a turning point,” he said. “She had been my greatest supporter, the one who convinced me that I could become anything — a doctor, a lawyer, anything, if I studied hard.” Losing her at such a young age exposed him to new tough hardships, including discrimination from relatives and society itself. The decision to finally write the book came years later, after he became a father himself. One day,

Latest News from Korea

Latest Entertainment from Korea

Learn People & History of Korea