She wanted her daughter to always know one thing — Mom loves you, always. No matter what the world says, no matter how life unfolded, that was the truth she wanted carved into her child’s memory.
Her daughter was not a mistake. She was planned, even if life around her was messy. The story began fourteen years earlier, when two teenagers fell in love. They drifted apart, reconnected years later, and tried again with the kind of hope only young people carry. Later they rebuilt what had been lost, two souls, one dream. She would go to law school; he would study business and finally escape jobs that made him small. Together, they planned a future. Together, they dreamed.
They moved countries like pilgrims carrying promises: Namibia, then Zimbabwe, then South Africa. She was twenty-five, full of ambition, faith, and the sweet naivety of believing love could carry all burdens. He would send her songs, “I’m gonna marry you,” or Kwetsa’s Ngikhetile. Every lyric stitched into her the belief that this was her forever. He had a beautiful smile and eyes that their daughter would inherit, eyes that carried both beauty and betrayal.
At first, it was magical. He called her Nana because she was small, and in his arms, she felt safe. She believed she had finally arrived at the life she had always dreamed of. But magic has a way of dissolving in the harsh light of reality.
They lived with his friends, and she quickly felt like an outsider in her own home. They whispered behind her back. He never defended her. The day he bought groceries for her but sent another woman to deliver them while she sat inside, humiliation cut deeper than poverty. When he bought sanitary pads for another man’s wife but ignored her needs, the wound grew wider. She felt like a shadow, a second option, a visitor in a space where she was supposed to belong.
And then, pregnancy. The first week of their life together, she conceived. Suddenly, she was trapped between a hard rock and a dry place. She was unhappy, but she was carrying a new life. She reached out to her aunt, who took her in. From then on, their relationship became a battlefield of insults and bitterness.
But the hardest truth for her, and for many women like her, was this: sometimes you must choose between being present and providing. Many African women are forced to migrate, chasing work, chasing survival. And in that cruel equation, presence and provision rarely coexist.
She longed to see her daughter’s first steps, to hear her first words. Instead, she left her with her grandparents, joining the countless mothers who leave children behind in the care of aging parents. Migration for women is not like migration for men. Men leave and are praised for being providers. Women leave and are judged — whispered about, shamed, branded mvana or careless. Yet no one speaks of the weight they carry, the children they cry for in strange beds, the guilt they fold into their pillows at night.
For women, migration carries a heavier burden. Crossing borders with a baby on your back, often without proper documents, is just the beginning. Every day is shadowed by the fear of exploitation, employers who know you have no protection, the constant threat of harassment, underpayment, or abuse. Yet you endure, because every coin you send home puts food on the table, pays school fees, and keeps your child alive.
Sometimes, this means your child cannot have a stable home. You move from one place to another, balancing work with the tiny windows of time you can spend with her. Safe, comfortable housing is often beyond reach on the salaries available, forcing you into neighborhoods or communities you wish your child would never see. Daycares are often inadequate — playgrounds at best, sometimes sites of neglect or abuse, but you persevere because they are all you can afford. No young mother wants her child to suffer, yet circumstances leave few alternatives.
This is why many mothers choose grandparents as caretakers. It is not perfect, but it provides stability, love, and consistency. She had a degree, but degrees do not feed children in economies that are collapsing. She left for South Africa, where she worked under exploitative conditions, mistreated but enduring, because her home needed clothes, food, and medicine. Every insult she swallowed, she swallowed for her daughter. Every wound she carried, she carried in silence.
And still, the wound would never heal. The wound of leaving a child behind. The wound of watching graves fill with young women who left chasing hope but returned in coffins, leaving orphans behind. The wound of knowing that in Africa today, too many mothers must choose: stay and starve together, or leave and break your own heart.
For her, leaving was the most painful choice of her life. Even years later, the memory stung like it had happened yesterday. She still whispered apologies into the silence: “You were never a mistake, my child. You were my light. If I left, it was never because I did not love you — it was because love demanded sacrifice, and this was mine.”
To every woman navigating these challenges: your worth is not measured by your proximity, but by the depth of your sacrifice and the lessons of strength you model every day. Even when the road is hard, even when the nights are long, know that your efforts shape a future your child may one day understand — and one day thank you for.
And though you may question whether it is “enough,” it is important to remember: being a migrant mother does not make you a failure. Every sacrifice you make, every hardship you endure, is a testament to your courage. You are building resilience in your child, teaching her that love is not always convenient, but it is powerful.