Veintidós años después: La madre despedida que volvió como heroína

Veintidós años después: La madre despedida que volvió como heroína

I got fired because I was pregnant. But twenty-two years later, I walked through those same doors again, this time as the mother of the best student.

My name is Juliana. In 2002, I was cleaning Excelsior Private Academy, one of the most prestigious schools in Delta State. She was only three months pregnant and single. The director called me and said, “We can’t have someone who shames children.”
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I begged her: “Please, this job is all I have to feed my baby.”

He just replied, “Then marry the father.” Or go away.”

That day I left, a mop in one hand and silent tears in the other.

My son Dera was born in pain and hunger. We lived tight with my cousin, with no future but day to day. At five years old, he was already asking questions that no parent wants to hear:

“Mommy, why do we share the bathroom with strangers?” “.

Why don’t I have a father like the other kids?

Why do you clean houses every weekend?.

He replied with hugs and truths, always repeating: “Study hard.” Someday, your books will speak for both of you.”

At eight years old, he saw an Excelsior report on TV and said, “Someday, I want to study there, mommy.” “I want to enter through that door in your uniform.”

I laughed bitterly it was the same school that kicked me out. But I promised, “If you get a scholarship, I will sell pepper barefoot just to buy you shoes.”

He never forgot it. Life either.

In sixth grade, Dera won a spelling bee: first at the state level, then zonal and finally national. The newspapers reviewed it. Excelsior too. He was offered a full scholarship.

I didn’t say anything walking him to the school entrance. No one recognized me. I kept quiet. Sometimes silence is the sweetest revenge.

For six years, I didn’t miss a single visit. I brought okra soup in recycled containers, I waited silently after rich, perfumed and powerful parents, without complaining ever.

Every quarter, my son came back with straight A’s and a smile that kept me strong.

The graduation has come.

Dera was topping the list. He was chosen for the farewell speech.

I sat down in the back, with my worn old robe. And then i heard :

“I dedicate this award to the woman who taught me how to clean off shame until it turns it into dignity.”

They all flipped over.

“Twenty-two years ago, Excelsior fired her because she was pregnant.” Today, that same pregnancy graduates her with honors.”

Sighs were heard across the classroom. Applause erupted from some, others were paralyzed. The director went pale.

“Mommy… “please come closer.”

My knees shook when I got up.

My son hugged me tight and whispered:

“At last, we walked through that door.”

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