She wondered lovingly as
she slowly and gently rubbed over her flat stomach. She smiled an inward smile
of joy, pride, and happiness… all the wonderful feelings rolled in one. That is
how she felt at this exact moment in time. She wished she could shout it out
loud to the world that she was happy. She wished she could dance for joy, and
scream to the top of her lungs about how happy she was. But she couldn’t. It
was ….. Oh no her life is complicated.
Sandra was a beautiful,
twenty-six years old banker. She was born Sandra Uju Ogbuji to her wretched
parents in a little town in delta state called Ekuinu. Her father was the
headmaster of the village school and her mother a petty trader. They had being
married for two years and the in-laws
where getting impatient with the delay in producing offspring that they had begun
the usual rituals of marrying a new wife for Mazi Eke on an Affor market day in
the Egbuna family compound. Akunna- Mazi Eke’s wife suddenly began feeling
dizzy in the heat of the occasion. She rushed over to the back of the house and
began puking profusely and retching as well. She puked for hours on and off,
and by the time it was over, she was done, she was exhausted and could hardly
stand. She rushed into the small part of the family house she shared with her
husband through the back door, what her in-laws and some of the guests at the
wedding saw as rudeness.
However, when Ngozika, Akunna’s
sister-in-law went into the room to confront her she was shocked at the shape Akunna
was in. but when Akunna rushed out to puke for the umpteenth time, Ngozika knew
that she had made the wrong decision by getting her brother a new wife. Now,
that decision had to be undone. That was how the new marriage was nipped in the
bud right before it blossomed into a plant. Nonetheless, Akunna’s problems
weren’t ending. Her problems were beginning.
She gave birth to a chubby
and beautiful little girl nine months later, to the dismay of her in-laws. In
the tradition of the people of Ekwuni, a man’s first child being a girl was
seen as a taboo and as such was not treated lightly. According to their native
laws, the child had to be sent to her mother’s family until a son is born into
the household. Thus, once Sandra was born her fate was already sealed.
The problem in this case
was that Akunna had no relatives. She was an only child to parents who were
only children as well. Thus, there was no relative for her little unnamed
daughter to be taken to, but tradition had to be followed. Akunna cried and
begged her husband and in-laws to take the baby in, but they totally refused.
About a month after the birth of the baby, the child was charted away by the
female members of the Egbunu family in the dead of a cold rainy night and taken
to Late Mazi Nnadi’s empty weed overgrown compound.
The helpless baby was left
out in the cold night crying and wailing for her mother’s gentle touch, and
several miles away, her mother sat on the bare floor of her mud and thatch
house crying and wailing as well as she felt her breasts heavy with breast milk
meant for her suckling baby. She had no friends to console her save her equally
grieving husband. So she wept and grieved for days and nights on end. She
stayed indoors for months and didn’t eat any food during this time. She wept
for the innocent little child she had brought into the world to suffer at the
hands of fate and tradition.
Thanks for your comment on my blog. Just read this and I'm touched by the plight of the mother and baby. Good writing and I look forward to reading more.
ReplyDeleteThanks Myne...Appreciate it
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