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Opinion | In the decade since my mother’s passing, I cling to anything I can to keep her here with me

Updated
3 min read
Nadja Halilbegovich with her mother Jasmina

Nadja Halilbegovich with her mother Jasmina during their final visit in 2012. Nadja is wearing the pink shirt her mother hemmed.Ìý


Nadja Halilbegovich is the author of 'My Childhood Under Fire: A Sarajevo Diary.' She is a writer and public speaker and lives in Toronto.

The last time I saw my mother, she flew thousands of miles to visit me. We had been living on separate continents for half of my life — ever sinceÌýI escaped the war in my native Bosnia at 16. We loved each other fiercely, but our short visits could not make up for the time and distance always tugging at our relationship. She died a few months later, from complications of heart surgery.

In the decade since her passing, I have held onto the good memories. I have fantasized about what could have been had she lived and had we made more memories. I have also replayed our hurts and misunderstandings, changing my behaviour and softening her reactions to reclaim the points of connection we hadÌýmissed — if only in my imaginings.

Nadja Halilbegovich is the author of ‘My Childhood Under Fire: A Sarajevo Diary.’ She is a writer and public speaker and lives in Toronto.

Opinion articles are based on the author’s interpretations and judgments of facts, data and events. More details

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