Dada, 14, with her daughter Hussainia, 18 months, was kidnapped and raped at age 12 while a captive of Boko Haram. She is among thousands of abductees in northern Nigeria who have been thrust, untreated, into communities that are not equipped to tend to their wounds. ⠀ ⠀ Dada escaped when she was 8 months pregnant. She gave birth on the run and eventually reunited with her mother and sister in Maiduguri, where they share a one-room shack behind a busy roadside market. ⠀ ⠀ Going back to Banki, where she was kidnapped, is out of the question, says Dada. It wouldn’t be safe for her daughter. She worries that her neighbors will say Hussainia has "bad blood" because her father was a Boko Haram fighter. "A lot of people think those children are bad and dangerous and wicked," she says. She has heard stories, backed up by @unicef, of similar children being killed by the community and sometimes even family members.⠀ ⠀ Dada once dreamed of becoming a schoolteacher in her village. That future is closed, she says. "It used to make me angry when I thought about how he destroyed my life for getting me pregnant," Dada says. "It makes me sick and it turns my head around, and I feel like collapsing." The only thing she can do now, she says, is ensure that Hussainia gets to go to school.⠀ ⠀ Read the full story by our Africa correspondent Aryn Baker (@arynebaker) at TIME.com. Photograph by Paolo Pellegrin (@pellegrinpaolo)—@magnumphotos for TIME.

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 7月6日 00時26分


Dada, 14, with her daughter Hussainia, 18 months, was kidnapped and raped at age 12 while a captive of Boko Haram. She is among thousands of abductees in northern Nigeria who have been thrust, untreated, into communities that are not equipped to tend to their wounds. ⠀

Dada escaped when she was 8 months pregnant. She gave birth on the run and eventually reunited with her mother and sister in Maiduguri, where they share a one-room shack behind a busy roadside market. ⠀

Going back to Banki, where she was kidnapped, is out of the question, says Dada. It wouldn’t be safe for her daughter. She worries that her neighbors will say Hussainia has "bad blood" because her father was a Boko Haram fighter. "A lot of people think those children are bad and dangerous and wicked," she says. She has heard stories, backed up by @unicef, of similar children being killed by the community and sometimes even family members.⠀

Dada once dreamed of becoming a schoolteacher in her village. That future is closed, she says. "It used to make me angry when I thought about how he destroyed my life for getting me pregnant," Dada says. "It makes me sick and it turns my head around, and I feel like collapsing." The only thing she can do now, she says, is ensure that Hussainia gets to go to school.⠀

Read the full story by our Africa correspondent Aryn Baker (@arynebaker) at TIME.com. Photograph by Paolo Pellegrin (@pellegrinpaolo)—@Magnum Photos for TIME.


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