Sailor Realizes Childhood Dream
by U.S. Navy Author
June 16, 2023
Leaning against a bulkhead on the
forecastle aboard the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer
USS Milius (DDG 69), soaked to the skin in sweat from hours spent
under the scorching sun, Personnel Specialist 3rd Class Abdul
Mohammed took a short break from line handling during the ship’s
fifth underway replenishment in less than a month.
 May 18, 2023 – Personnel Specialist 3rd Class Abdul Mohammed, from New York, stands in the port break aboard the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Milius (DDG 69) during an underway replenishment with the Lewis and Clark-class dry cargo ship USNS Carl Brashear (T-AKE 7) while operating in the Philippine Sea. Milius is assigned to Commander, Task Force 71/Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 15, the Navy’s largest forward-deployed DESRON and the U.S. 7th Fleet’s principal surface force. (Image
created by USA Patriotism! from U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Greg Johnson.)
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“It’s a great day to be serving my
country,” said Mohammed, wiping the sweat from his eyes, not
dissuaded by the sweltering heat and humidity of the tropical
Western Pacific. “It’s not always easy and it never lets up, but
it’s truly one of the noblest pursuits one can dedicate themselves
to.”
Standing 6 feet 3 inches tall and built like a
professional athlete, the 42-year-old Ghana native has the strength
and physique of someone half his age. He’s a rugged looking
character who wears the stern glare of someone who has worked long
and hard through the years. It’s the look of someone who is no
stranger to adversity.
For Mohammed, toughness is more than a
just a look, it’s a biography. Hard work and perseverance are the
CliffsNotes of a story that has taken him from humble beginnings as
a street hustler in Ghana, to serving as an American citizen and
Sailor in the United States Navy.
Mohammed was born in
Kumasi, Ghana, in 1980 and grew up in a family with eight brothers
and sisters. His father was a farmer and finding work meant living
outside the city, but the family moved back and forth so the kids
were closer to school during the school year. Mohammed was an
exceptional student and graduated high school in 2000 with
aspirations for college, but quickly realized it wasn’t financially
possible and a few months later found himself in the capital city of
Accra.
“I went to Accra to hustle,” said Mohammed. “In Ghana,
there are so many things we do that we don’t really do in the United
States, like shining peoples’ shoes and fixing torn out shoes and
sandals for money. You go around in the mornings and on Sundays.
Sometimes in the afternoons people will let us shine their shoes at
work. That’s what I was doing.”
He had been in Accra about
six months when he found a second source of income. A friend of a
friend owned a local garage and needed someone to wash cars, so he
continued shining shoes during the day and washing cars at night.
“I used that garage as my home,” said Mohammed. “I would sleep
in one of the cars, get up and go around and wash the cars, then
come back and sleep. In the morning, I would go and pray, pick up my
shoe shine box and go.”
Mohammed worked and slept at the
garage for about a year. During that time he learned the city and
met many people, some of which would have an unexpected and profound
influence on the course of his life.
“After a year, I knew
the city more and I had friends and contacts,” he said. “There was
one woman in the community who became close with me because I was
steadfast with my prayers and she took me as her son. Up until this
day, I am part of her family.”
That woman’s name was Halima
Ismail, and it was her daughter, Zeena, who encouraged Mohammed to
pursue a career in radio because, according to Mohammed, she knew
him well enough to know sports radio was a passion of his.
“She was reading a newspaper and saw an advertisement for radio
presentation and journalism programs and showed it to me,” said
Mohammed. “She knew me well enough to know I love sports and
commentating and she said, ‘look, you can do this, because you love
it.’ So, I said, ‘okay, I will.’ By that time, I had saved up some
money, so I called the number and submitted an application the next
day.”
Mohammed completed the six-month program and went on to
complete another two years of study at Dard Professional Institute
in Accra New Town. He would eventually find work at an Accra radio
station called Peace FM in 2006. He didn’t know it at the time, but
it would be the last job he would ever hold in Ghana.
Peace
FM wasn’t immediately interested in his services, but with some
persistence, they let Mohammed take part in some live sports
programs, and after impressing the station’s program director, he
started working full time. During his two years at the station, he
met yet another person who would help influence his path in life and
become a life-long friend.
Julian Beale, a guest sports
analyst at Peace FM preparing to travel to the Michigan for graduate
school, convinced Mohammed to submit an application to the U.S.
Diversity Visa Immigrant Program.
Mohammed was no stranger
to the program, which awards 55,000 immigrant visas annually to
applicants from countries with low numbers of immigrants in the
previous five years in an effort to promote diversity. He had been
filling out applications every year since 2001, but never actually
submitted any of them.
“Coming to America is a dream in
Ghana,” said Mohammed. “Everyone knows about the visa lottery and
every year I would fill out the forms, but I would never send them
in. How was I going to be picked out of millions of applicants
around the world?”
 March 6, 2023 – Personnel Specialist 3rd Class Abdul Mohammed, from New York, mans a mooring line aboard the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Milius (DDG 69) as the ship conducts routine operations. Milius is assigned to Commander, Task Force 71/Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 15, the Navy’s largest forward-deployed DESRON and the U.S. 7th Fleet’s principal surface force. (Image
created by USA Patriotism! from U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Greg Johnson.)
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Mohammed actually submitted his “green card
lottery” application for the first time ever in 2006, then went work
the next day like it never happened. He continued to do the same
thing every day until he walked into the station one Saturday
morning in March 2007 to find a large white envelope addressed to
him from U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services that read,
“Congratulations, you have been selected for the Diversity Immigrant
Visa Program.”
“I can’t tell you how happy I was at that
moment,” he said. “I went to the room where we seat the guests
before shows and just sat for like 10 minutes thinking about how
lucky one can be. I thought I was dreaming, but I looked at it again
and it was real. This is something I had been dreaming about since I
was a child. I thought, ‘thank god for this.’”
After entering
the U.S. in 2008, Mohammed spent a number of years working in New
York and going to school at Manhattan Community College. He applied
for and became a U.S. citizen in 2018, but throughout the years
endured several tough times, including the death of his father in
2010 and a major shoulder injury that limited his work capabilities
from 2013-2017.
Despite the adversity, he persevered and
eventually started a successful travel company, and later a car
sales company on the side. By 2018, Mohammed was better off
financially than he had been at any point in his life, but that
didn’t stop him from making good on a promise he made to himself a
long time ago.
“Serving one’s country is one of the most
dignified things someone can do and I was always going to serve the
United States at some point in time,” he said. “In Ghana, we learn
about the history of the United States and I’ve always had such a
great respect for what I know as the greatest military in the world,
so I take tremendous pride in serving. It’s also very much about
giving back to the country that has given me an opportunity that I
never expected to have.”
Mohammed has served aboard Milius
since November 2022 and is not sure what his military future holds,
but he said there is one specific duty he has in mind.
“My
personal wish is to be a recruiter in New York, where I was
recruited,” he said. “When I look at the way everything happened in
my case, I probably hesitated to join the military because I didn’t
know a lot about it. I know there are so many others in the same
shoes, who are potentially great service men or women and don’t know
they are capable or that they qualify. It would be an honor to
recruit young men and women who can serve their country just as I
am.”
In the long term, Mohammed is focused on community
service, something he was already doing in New York long before
joining the Navy. In 2013, he started a program called The First
Time, which encourages Bronx youths to avoid destructive “first
time” experiences, such as a first cigarette or first drug use. He
said his prior military experience might help drive this kind of
community effort.
“With a military background, I can now
confidently talk to congressmen, mayors, lawmakers and other civic
leaders and show them what I want to do in an effort to get their
support,” said Mohammed. “There’s a lot of things happening out
there that are not good for our society and a lot of young people in
the Bronx living lives of hopelessness. That’s what we need to
confront and we need to do give our very best toward changing that.”
Despite such a strong commitment to helping his newfound
community and country, Mohammed has still not forgotten where he
came from.
“It’s a great opportunity to feel and experience
both sides of the coin,” he said. “Coming from very humble
beginnings, life was hard, and now I have the privilege of being an
American, but any time I go to Ghana, it’s a homecoming with friends
and family. Ghana is always going to be there with me until the last
breath of my life, which is a gift in itself.”
Milius is
assigned to Commander, Task Force 71/Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 15,
the Navy’s largest forward-deployed DESRON and the U.S. 7th Fleet’s
principal surface force.
U.S. 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy’s
largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, and routinely interacts and
operates with allies and partners in preserving a free and open
Indo-Pacific region.
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