Farah, who became the first British track and field athlete to win four Olympic golds, said his children have impelled him to be truthful about his past.

“The real story is I was born in Somaliland, north of Somalia, as Hussein Abdi Kahin,” he told the BBC. “Despite what I’ve said in the past, my parents never lived in the U.K.
“When I was four my dad was killed in the civil war, you know as a family we have been ripped apart. I was detached from my mother, and I was brought into the U.K. illegally under the name of another child called Mohamed Farah.”
During the documentary, Farah said he believed he was going to Europe to live with relatives and recalled going through a British passport check under the pretense of Mohamed at the age of nine after traveling with a woman he didn’t previously know.
“I had all the contact details for my relative and once we got to her house, the lady took it off me and right in front of me tore them up and put them in the waste bin, and at that minute I knew I was in trouble,” he said.
The athlete traveled back to his childhood home in west London, recollecting “not great memories” where he was not treated as part of the family.
Farah finally told teacher Alan Watkinson the truth and moved to live with his friend’s mum who took care of him and he ended up staying for seven years.
It was Watkinson who applied for Farah’s British citizenship which he narrated as a “long process.” Farah was recognized as a British citizen in 2000.