From Generator Repairman to Blockchain Mentor
In 2016, Musa Danladi was crawling under old generators in Kaduna, earning barely $2 a day. No degree. No laptop. Just a cracked Tecno phone and a wild curiosity about this thing called Bitcoin.
While others slept, Musa spent nights in noisy cybercafés, teaching himself crypto. People laughed:
“Crypto no dey carry grease, Musa. It won’t fix your life.”
But he kept learning.
By 2018, he started flipping USDT between P2P platforms with just $50. It was slow… but real.
Fast forward to 2021 — Musa made his first $10,000. But instead of flexing, he built a free tech hub in Kaduna where local youth now learn how to earn online — in Hausa, Pidgin, and English.
In 2024, Musa flew to Dubai to speak at a global blockchain event. His first time on a plane.
Now? He wakes up to laughter, not diesel fumes.
“Crypto gave me peace, not just profit,” he says.