• News
    • Tech
    • Lifestyle
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Premium
  • Reviews
  • Events
    • Nigeria
    • South Africa
  • Tools
    • Price Guide
    • Find your idea car
    • Car valuation
    • Sell your car
    • Car insurance quote
    • Locate a dealer
    • Deals
  • For Sale
    • New Cars for sale
    • Cheap Cars for sale
    • Bikes for sale
    • Trucks for sale
    • Boats for sale
    • Jets for sale in Africa
    • Cars under 5m
    • EV in Nigeria
    • EV in South Africa
Saturday, August 16, 2025
  • Login
Auto Journal Africa
  • News
    • Tech
    • Lifestyle
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Premium
  • Reviews
  • Events
    • Nigeria
    • South Africa
  • Tools
    • Price Guide
    • Find your idea car
    • Car valuation
    • Sell your car
    • Car insurance quote
    • Locate a dealer
    • Deals
  • For Sale
    • New Cars for sale
    • Cheap Cars for sale
    • Bikes for sale
    • Trucks for sale
    • Boats for sale
    • Jets for sale in Africa
    • Cars under 5m
    • EV in Nigeria
    • EV in South Africa
Ask Autojorunal AI
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Tech
    • Lifestyle
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Premium
  • Reviews
  • Events
    • Nigeria
    • South Africa
  • Tools
    • Price Guide
    • Find your idea car
    • Car valuation
    • Sell your car
    • Car insurance quote
    • Locate a dealer
    • Deals
  • For Sale
    • New Cars for sale
    • Cheap Cars for sale
    • Bikes for sale
    • Trucks for sale
    • Boats for sale
    • Jets for sale in Africa
    • Cars under 5m
    • EV in Nigeria
    • EV in South Africa
No Result
View All Result
Morning News
No Result
View All Result
Home Africa

Mechanics like Musa are the real engineers of Africa

Michael Olabode Williams by Michael Olabode Williams
June 11, 2025
in Africa, Premium
0
Musa Mechanic
3.8k
SHARES
19.6k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Beneath a rusted zinc canopy patched with scrap metal and car bonnets, a mechanic named Musa hunches over the engine of a battered Peugeot 504. With hands blackened by years of grease and toil, he works with the precision of a trained engineer, but without any formal degree. Here, in the dusty belly of northern Nigeria, Musa is quietly redefining what engineering means on the continent.

To passersby, he might appear to be just another roadside mechanic. But to the growing circle of apprentices at his feet, Musa is more than that; a mentor, an innovator, and a living symbol of grassroots African ingenuity.

READ ALSO

Ford bets on $30,000 EVs to take on China’s low-cost dominance

Toyota Q1 2025 sales rise but profit drops as costs bite, outlook steady

The classroom of the streets

Musa never went to university. He never stepped foot in a formal engineering lab. But give him a broken-down SUV, a dead alternator, or a cracked cylinder head, and you’ll watch him work a miracle. He doesn’t just repair; he reimagines solutions, often using tools he’s handcrafted from scrap, or substituting rare parts with locally sourced materials.

“In school, they learn theory. Here, we learn survival,” Musa says, wiping sweat from his brow. “Every car is a new puzzle. And we don’t have the luxury of new parts, we use brain and prayer.”

Across Africa, thousands of mechanics like Musa form the silent, beating heart of the continent’s mobility economy. In countries where official roadworthy diagnostics and OEM part supplies are luxuries, these roadside technicians keep millions of vehicles moving, from commercial buses in Lagos to farm trucks in Kenya.

Beyond fixing cars: Building futures

In Musa’s small workshop, young boys gather daily, not just to fix cars, but to learn a craft that could define their future. He trains them for free, often feeding them from his own plate.

One of his apprentices, 19-year-old Ayo, was on the brink of dropping out of secondary school. “Musa baba took me in,” Ayo shared. “Now I can fix an engine head with my eyes closed. I want to open my own garage one day—just like him.”

Musa shrugs off the praise. “I’m just doing what others did for me,” he says. “But maybe if we had more respect, more support, our work would be seen as real engineering.”

And he’s right. While degrees and laboratories have their place, much of Africa’s automotive ecosystem depends not on white coats but on the wisdom in worn hands and trial-by-fire problem solving.

The innovation that never makes headlines

Mechanics like Musa are natural-born engineers. They adapt parts from a Toyota to fix a Hyundai, turn washing machine motors into vehicle cooling fans, and use recycled plastics and metals to recreate hard-to-find car components. In their own way, they are pushing the boundaries of sustainable, frugal innovation—an African trademark that rarely gets global recognition.

Yet despite their contributions, they remain under-celebrated. They have no national award, no TED Talk, and no startup fund.

But maybe that’s starting to change.

Initiatives like Autojournal’s Mechanic Summit and grassroots tech-meet-mechanical forums are beginning to illuminate this underground network of engineers in coveralls. Slowly, the narrative is shifting from mere “fitters” to frontline innovators.

The soul of Africa’s roads

As the sun sets and another long day winds down, Musa sits on a bench next to a pile of old tyres. He lights a cigarette and watches as his apprentices laugh and tinker with an old carburetor.

“They call us roadside boys,” he says, a slight grin forming, “but when people are stuck on the road, we’re the ones they call.”

In a continent racing toward industrial self-reliance and technological sovereignty, the real heroes may not be in glass towers or university lecture halls. They may be in open-air garages, under the sun and rain, crafting brilliance from broken parts.

Mechanics like Musa are not just fixing cars, they’re rebuilding Africa, one engine at a time.

Read more on The rise of African-made cars: Can local automakers take on the global giants?

Tags: africaHeadlineMechanicMusaNigeria

Related Posts

Ford Motor Electric vehicles
Electric Vehicles

Ford bets on $30,000 EVs to take on China’s low-cost dominance

August 12, 2025
Toyota profit in Q1 2025
News

Toyota Q1 2025 sales rise but profit drops as costs bite, outlook steady

August 12, 2025
European Union waits for U.S. action on car tariffs and trade deal promises
News

European Union waits for U.S. action on car tariffs and trade deal promises

August 12, 2025
The 2025 West Africa Automotive Show (WAAS)
News

West Africa Automotive Show 2025 brings Africa’s Auto Industry Together

August 12, 2025
Motorcycle imports in Nigeria
News

Nigeria spends ₦146bn to import motorcycles in three months, says NBS

August 12, 2025
Five cars worth buying if you have an unlimited budget
Cars/SUVs

Five cars worth buying if you have an unlimited budget

August 8, 2025
Next Post
plane crash in India

Air India flight to London crashes after takeoff in Ahmedabad with 242 on board

POPULAR NEWS

Inferno at Toyota 1000 Desert Race consumes 49 cars

Inferno at Toyota 1000 Desert Race consumes 49 cars

July 3, 2023
Mobius Motors

Mobius Motors: Rising taxes, competition ends Kenyan SUV maker’s journey

August 7, 2024
Autojournal car race

Get ready for the biggest RACE show this December in Nigeria

August 12, 2024
From style to sustainability: How Geely Auto is shaping the future of luxury vehicles

From style to sustainability: How Geely Auto is shaping the future of luxury vehicles

October 25, 2024
Oyo State Governor gifts Saheed Osupa Toyota Prado SUV worth ₦70M 

Oyo State Governor gifts Saheed Osupa Toyota Prado SUV worth ₦70M 

August 22, 2023

EDITOR'S PICK

South Africa’s Luxury Cars

Can German automakers outpace Chinese rivals in South Africa’s luxury car market?

January 20, 2025
Ferrari’s 100-ft hypersail to ‘fly’ carbon-free across the Atlantic

Ferrari’s 100-ft hypersail to ‘fly’ carbon-free across the Atlantic

June 29, 2025
Anticipated fuel price drop brings hope for South African drivers

Anticipated fuel price drop brings hope for South African drivers

June 18, 2024
Ford, Tesla, Stellantis, and Rivian recall over 660,000 vehicles amid safety concerns

Ford, Tesla, Stellantis, and Rivian recall over 660,000 vehicles amid safety concerns

February 24, 2025

About

Auto Journal Africa is the leading online and print magazine for automobiles in Africa.

Follow us

Recent Posts

  • Ford bets on $30,000 EVs to take on China’s low-cost dominance
  • Toyota Q1 2025 sales rise but profit drops as costs bite, outlook steady
  • European Union waits for U.S. action on car tariffs and trade deal promises
  • Nigeria Police extend tinted glass permit enforcement to October 2, 2025

Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Events
  • Tools
  • For Sale

© 2023 Auto Journal

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Tech
    • Lifestyle
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Premium
  • Reviews
  • Events
    • Nigeria
    • South Africa
  • Tools
    • Price Guide
    • Find your idea car
    • Car valuation
    • Sell your car
    • Car insurance quote
    • Locate a dealer
    • Deals
  • For Sale
    • New Cars for sale
    • Cheap Cars for sale
    • Bikes for sale
    • Trucks for sale
    • Boats for sale
    • Jets for sale in Africa
    • Cars under 5m
    • EV in Nigeria
    • EV in South Africa

© 2023 Auto Journal

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In