Chapter 1: A Fight for Survival
Let us return to 1965.
My mother was born in a small rural village, far from the capital. Life there was simple but heavy with struggle. When her parents separated, she and her younger sister were left in the care of their grandmother raised in a traditional home where love and survival were all that mattered.
Like many girls of her time, my mother never had the chance to go to school. Her future was not hers to choose. At just fifteen, she was married off to a man and taken far from everything she knew. The little girl who once played barefoot in her village suddenly found herself in a new home, surrounded by strangers, fear, and uncertainty.
Not long after her marriage, tragedy struck. She discovered a small lump on the left side of her neck. At first, she ignored it a girl with bigger worries than pain. But each day, it grew. It stretched the skin, swollen and angry, until one day it burst, spilling pus and blood.
There was no nearby clinic, no transportation, no one who knew what to do. She became weaker, unable to stand. Her family, helpless and afraid, prepared themselves for the worst. Everyone believed she would die. But fate was not finished with her.
One day, her uncle’s wife, a gentle woman who was blind came to the village. When she knew my mother’s condition, tears filled her sightless eyes. She could not walk through life with her own vision, yet she saw what others didn’t: hope. Against all odds, she made a brave decision to take my mother to the capital city.
The journey was long and painful. Too weak to walk, my mother was carried to the bus. A blind woman leading a dying girl was a sight that made travellers whisper. But nothing stopped them. Hope carried them forward. By the time they arrived, my mother could barely speak. She lay in bed, her breath shallow. The blind woman rushed her to the hospital, praying for a miracle. But the doctor's words shattered them: “It has turned into cancer. Treatment will be difficult and costly.” They had no money. No support. No answers.
With nowhere left to turn, the blind woman sought advice from neighbours. Someone mentioned a traditional healer, an old man known for treating hopeless cases. With one last thread of faith, they went to him. He examined her carefully and sighed.
“Her chance of survival is only ten per cent. But I will try. And I will not take any payment.”
And so the battle began.
Every morning, he prepared bitter herbal medicine. My mother drank it faithfully, praying with every swallow. Days turned into months. Months into years. For two long years, the blind woman cared for her, while the family struggled to feed and support them.
Then, a miracle.
Slowly, the pain eased. Her voice returned. Her strength came back. The lump disappeared as if it had never existed. Against all odds, she lived.
Her healing was a story whispered in villages and praised in prayer houses a girl who walked back from the edge of death.
But survival was only the beginning.
As she stood again on her own feet, another battle waited in her heart. With a new life before her, she faced a choice that would shape everything that came after:
Would she return to the village and the life she once knew…
or would she stay in the city and begin a new destiny?