😲 The schoolchildren humiliated my daughter, and the headmistress suggested I let the incident go : but I couldn’t accept that, so here’s what I did.
One day, I received a call from my daughter’s school, telling me there had been an incident, and she was involved. I immediately left work and went to the school. When I arrived, I saw my daughter in the middle of a circle of children. She was completely covered in blue paint and crying. No one seemed to be helping her.
The culprits were three boys, from influential families. These boys were not punished, while my daughter was left alone in her pain.
The headmistress explained the situation to me, but she added that we shouldn’t make too much of a fuss about it. She suggested that if we let the incident go, it wouldn’t affect Maya’s academic progress. I felt that my daughter was the victim of an unjust situation, but I was being told to remain silent for her future at school.
I found myself facing a dilemma: protect my daughter and get her justice, or do what seemed to be best for her future at school. It was a difficult situation to accept, so I did something that made the headmistress and the boys regret their actions.
The full story is in the article in the first comment 👇👇👇.
I couldn’t ignore the injustice.
So, I decided to take matters into my own hands.
Rather than simply accepting the school’s superficial apologies, I wrote a letter detailing the incident, exposing the boys’ behavior and the staff’s inaction.
I sent it to the academic authorities, the parents of the children involved, and requested to meet with the headmistress again, but this time with a lawyer present.
A few days later, the school’s attitude changed.
The boys were punished, and a meeting was organized for my daughter to talk about what she had experienced.
This moment of justice was crucial for her, and despite the obstacles, I was proud to have done what was right.










