Tell me—what do you see here? A young, beautiful woman holding her degree in a Master of Science in Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, the parchment clasped in steady, accomplished hands?
Oh friend, that barely brushes the surface of her story.
Behind that gown stands a lion-hearted woman. An indefatigable spirit. A faith in Christ not polished by comfort, but forged in fire. That “little scroll of paper” was not handed to her by ease or privilege—it was wrestled from adversity by prayer, grit, and grace.
She was born into poverty, in a land where rebels roamed and children were not always safe; where corruption twisted justice and fear lingered in the background of daily life. Her father abandoned her. Her mother loved her fiercely—but love could not always shield her from hunger, hardship, or the relentless weight of survival. From childhood, she learned what it meant to work, to endure, to hope when hope seemed thin.
And yet—she rose.
That curving smile is more than pride. It is holy defiance.
It says: I will not be stopped.
It says: I will not surrender to the story written for me.
It says: By God’s gracious hand, I will go forward.
Every exam passed, every sleepless night endured, every doubt answered with prayer was a quiet act of rebellion against despair. She has overcome obstacles most of us will never have to imagine—let alone conquer.
So yes, you see a degree.
But I see courage baptized in suffering.
I see perseverance refined by trial.
I see a daughter who refused to let poverty define her future.
And I see a woman whose faith carried her where fear once stood guard.






