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The house seems vacant, even though people live there; the vacuum is evident. A 48-year-old woman is in the house, known to the world as the December 16 rape victim’s mother.
“Who would want this title? Which mother would want to replace her little girl’s trophies with the numerous lauds we have been conferred after her death,” she says in an interview to The Indian Express.
In the two bedroom apartment in Dwarka, into which the family moved months after the brutal incident, there is a shelf dedicated entirely to the fight they had put up to bring justice to their daughter Jyoti, popularly called Nirbhaya.
Jyoti’s mother now works as chairman of a NGO that fights for victims like her daughter. At the time of the incident, Jyoti was a physiotherapy student and had big dreams of supporting her family – her parents and two brothers.
One of her brothers has joined a private medical college in Uttar Pradesh. The elder brother is in his final year at a private engineering college.
The aggrieved mother has removed all remnants of her daughter – a stuffed teddy bear that was her playmate, her books and a diary she wrote in.
But Jyoti mother’s pain persists, so much that she wants to distance herself from people who knew her daughter.
Jyoti’s family will stage a protest at Jantar Mantar on December 16 to mark the anniversary of the day their daughter left home the last time, and the scheduled release of the juvenile, now an adult, convicted for the crime.
But Jyoti’s mother still seeks peace. She brings out her daughter’s t-shirt or jeans, the only things of Jyoti’s she has still kept, to ease her mind to get some sleep.
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