Close X
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Mumbai Woman’s Inspiring Story After Losing Her Husband In The 26/11 Attacks Will Move You

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Dec, 2016 01:20 PM
    Humans of Bombay, a Facebook page chronicling the lives of people in Mumbai, has shared the inspiring story of a woman and the unforeseen turns her life took after the 26/11 attacks, and how in spite of the odds not being in her favour, she decided to fight on.
     
     
    To make sure they had a good life, she decided to work hers around, went to school and got herself a job that would not only pay the bills but also make sure the kids had a good life.

    I’ve always been a homemaker while my husband worked at the railway station. We were very content with our lives— I was very happy raising my two daughters at home and he used to love his job.
     
    Suddenly one year, I fell really ill and I was hospitalised for a couple of months when we faced some difficulty managing everything, so my husband called his mother from our village to look after me here. After a few months when I recovered and my mother in law was leaving to return to Patna my husband went alone to drop her off at the station, sometime around 9PM.
     
    I was sleeping when my sister in-law called me around 10 PM, told me about the attacks and said my husband wasn’t answering his phone. I rushed down to the PCO to call him and after trying many times someone finally picked up and said, ‘the person who’s phone this is, is dead… come claim the body’ and I was shattered. I had no idea what to do or where to go, so I sat down on the floor and cried.
     
    It took me many months to recover — from seeing his body to realising that I had lost my partner forever. As time went by, I pulled myself together — I had to. I had two daughters who had their whole lives in front of them and I had to make sure that I did everything I could to educate them better.
     
    I received compensation from the government which I used for their education and to take care of the house and my mother. I was also offered a job from the railway, but since I had only studied until the 8th grade, I couldn’t get a job that paid me half as well, but I took it anyway. I wanted to set a better example for my daughters, so after a few months I decided to join school again.
     
    Those days were absolutely crazy, from preparing food for my daughters, dropping them to school, going to work, coming home, cooking dinner, doing my homework and rushing to night school at 7 PM…I have no idea where the strength came from! I just loved that I was educating myself to never feel helpless again — I finally passed my 10th-grade exam and am on my way to clearing my 12th and through this time I got my promotion as well!
     
    I know my husband would have been proud of me…of us — my daughters are doing so well at school. Sometimes, life takes people away…I still sometimes question why 26/11 had to ever happen, but the only way to fight back is to not give up. Every year, that day marks the death anniversary of my partner, but it also remains the day I became independent, where I didn’t succumb to the terror but used the pain to make my girls and me stronger.”

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    8 Seniors Allegedly Killed By An Woodstock, Ont., Registered Nurse

    8 Seniors Allegedly Killed By An Woodstock, Ont., Registered Nurse
     Police in Woodstock, Ont., on Tuesday charged a former registered nurse, Elizabeth Wettlaufer, with eight counts of first-degree murder. 

    8 Seniors Allegedly Killed By An Woodstock, Ont., Registered Nurse

    British PM Theresa May Hosts Diwali Reception At Downing Street

    British PM Theresa May Hosts Diwali Reception At Downing Street
    British Prime Minister Theresa May hosted a reception at Downing Street to celebrate Diwali and welcomed more than 150 key figures from across the Hindu, Sikh and Jain communities.

    British PM Theresa May Hosts Diwali Reception At Downing Street

    Indian-Origin Researcher's Smart Textiles To Measure Illness

    Indian-Origin Researcher's Smart Textiles To Measure Illness
    Kunal Mankodiya, Director of the university's Wearable Biosensing Laboratory is researching how to transform gloves, socks, clothing and even shoes into high-tech items that will make people healthier -- and improve their lives.

    Indian-Origin Researcher's Smart Textiles To Measure Illness

    Universe Not Expanding At Accelerating Rate: Study

    Universe Not Expanding At Accelerating Rate: Study
    Challenging a standard cosmological concept, a team of researchers led by an Indian-origin scientist has found that the universe may not actually be expanding at an accelerating pace as was previously believed.

    Universe Not Expanding At Accelerating Rate: Study

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change
    TORONTO — Allowing long-term Canadian expats to vote in federal elections is not a Constitutional requirement but a policy decision that Parliament has the right to make, the government plans to tell the country's top court.

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change

    University Groups Try To Stave Off Offensive Costumes In Lead-up To Halloween

    TORONTO — Geishas are out. Feathered headdresses are forbidden. And if you're planning to wear a Bill Cosby or Caitlyn Jenner costume, you may not be welcome at your Halloween party of choice.

    University Groups Try To Stave Off Offensive Costumes In Lead-up To Halloween