“We all have to die sooner or later, especially if you are a Somali.” Ahmed believes in this simple motto. His life could have easily ended both in Perugia, Italy, or Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia.
In 1991, 5-year-old Ahmed flees the Somali civil war with his mother and little brother, for Perugia, Italy. An early sense of alienation from Italian society guides the protagonist towards the local drug trafficking underworld.
In 2007 he's involved in the “Meredith-murder”, the most mysterious (and never solved) case of international crime news. Ahmed is among the witnesses during the trial against the defendants Amanda Knox, Raffaele Sollecito and Rudy Guede.
Released from prison in 2021, Guede was part of the "Afro-Perugia" community that Ahmed is associated with by playing basketball in Piazza Grimana during the day and wandering around the city's clubs at night.
His participation in the trial, however, earns him the harsh enmity of those to whom Guede was an innocent victim of Western racism. Perugia becomes too dangerous for the young "Italian-Somali”, uncertain about his future.
Nine thousand kilometers away, through the streets of Mogadishu, a group of Islamic terrorists has been watching him for some time. Through an operation worthy of the best secret services in the world, al Shabaab, with extreme shrewdness and patience, manages to recruit the protagonist.
Ahmed needs to flee Somalia once again but finds himself fighting another type of conflict, the one within his soul. He will have to choose between his love for Sofia, a special childhood friend, or the total trust in the tradition of Islam.
The eternal dilemma between Western culture and the one cultivated along the Gulf of Aden’s shores. As a result, Ahmed migrates across seas and deserts with a single purpose: to survive, one day at a time.
The writer and journalist Matteo Fraschini Koffi was inspired by the incredible life of Mohamed Abukar Barrow, "Momi", the Perugian from Mogadishu and co-author of the book. He too lives by one rule, and one rule only: "Ain’t Gonna Die Today".