She’s been promised in marriage, beaten, driven from her family home by her father, driven from a new home due to terrorist attacks and sexually victimized.
This chain of events began when Namiratou’s father shared his plans to give her in marriage to his friend who already had three wives. When the teen refused, the family patriarch beat her so severely she needed medical care.
When she returned from the hospital, Namiratou’s father chased her and her mom from the family home in the country’s Centre East region.
How do you start over after suffering a trauma?
The teen and her mother fled to their hometown in the Centre-North Region. Then, terrorists attacked their village and, once again, they found themselves running to seek refuge.
During this journey, a group of young men raped Namiratou. There was no time to recover. Namiratou’s mom had to guide her daughter through more days of walking in a demoralized state, before they settled in the city of Kaya with other internally displaced people from their hometown.
Hope is possible thanks to support through Children Believe and UNICEF
The duo connected with Children Believe who’s been building child-friendly spaces, along with providing psychosocial care and education, for displaced children recovering from trauma. That’s thanks to a UNICEF-funded grant in the cities of Kaya and Fada.
It’s at one of these safe spaces that Namiratou met our community facilitator who took her to a Doctors Without Borders health centre for care. Fortunately, she didn’t have an infection and could focus on receiving psychological care and support with a psychologist.
After a few counselling sessions, and with support from the psychologist and community animator (or social worker), an action plan was developed to guide Namiratou’s life forward, helping the survivor of violence and displacement.
Along with the medical and nutritional care — and as part of outreach to youth between three and 18 years old — she received a small monetary gift so she could begin income-generating activities.