Despite the suffering, the power of women never ceases to amaze me

A story of hope and kindness in Ethiopia

By Rania Dagash, UNICEF's Deputy Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa
Rania Dagash, UNICEF's Deputy Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa
UNICEFEthiopia/2022/NahomTesfaye
30 June 2022

I went to Dessie town, Amhara region, Ethiopia, to see the impact of the conflict on children and women and UNICEF’s response.

I was both heartbroken and inspired at the same time. Saddened by the trauma families have endured due to the conflict, but also amazed by the deep generosity of women in the community.

Rania Dagash, UNICEF's Deputy Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa
UNICEFEthiopia/2022/NahomTesfaye

Meet baby Rahima and her mother Amina. 

In Arabic, Rahima means ‘the merciful one’ and Amina means the ‘safe one’.

Last year, Amina and a few other women in a small community, just outside of Dessie town, found newly born baby Rahima on a corrugated roof on top of a hut, abandoned, wrapped only in a sheet.

Rania Dagash, UNICEF's Deputy Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa
UNICEFEthiopia/2022/NahomTesfaye

Did these women walk away, women who are living in abject poverty, women who are dependent on the UNICEF-supported humanitarian cash stipends that enables them to feed their families, enables them to survive – the answer is NO.  Amina stood up to the meaning of her name – ‘safe one’.

They took baby Rahima to the UNICEF-supported hospital in Dessie to make sure she was healthy. They also reported her situation to the local child protection services to initiate family tracing.

When no one came forward to claim baby Rahima these committed women did not abandon her. Eventually Amina said: “I will take her, I don’t have much and I have two children to feed, but she will become my child and I will take her as if she is my own.”

This was so incredibly humbling for me and I was awestruck by her story. Amina looked proud and tall. Her smile rarely left her face, nor that of Rahima.

We hear and read stories of crises in Ethiopia, unimaginable horrors. But what we do not hear about enough are the stories of hope, stories of generosity; the story of Amina and Rahima.


UNICEF thanks Sweden for their continuous support for the Humanitarian Cash Transfer Programme in Ethiopia.