Struggle, Scandal, Strength: Life Inside the Fight for Fairness by Donamol
In a modest home in Kerala, tension ruled. Donamol’s childhood was a constant echo of parental quarrels, economic hardship, and the weight of silence. Her father worked long hours as a constable; her mother, drained by illness, stood quietly. Grandparents’ affections offered solace but did not heal the wounds left by broken family harmony. School […] The post Struggle, Scandal, Strength: Life Inside the Fight for Fairness by Donamol first appeared on HindustanMetro.com.
In a modest home in Kerala, tension ruled. Donamol’s childhood was a constant echo of parental quarrels, economic hardship, and the weight of silence. Her father worked long hours as a constable; her mother, drained by illness, stood quietly. Grandparents’ affections offered solace but did not heal the wounds left by broken family harmony.
School life at St. Theresa’s was both refuge and battleground. Donamol juggled part-time jobs to meet her fees, rising before dawn only to rush into classes. While others smiled, she counted coins. Amid illness in the home and emotional neglect, she carried heavy loads both literal and invisible.
When four students, including one brilliant orphaned girl, were threatened with expulsion over unpaid scholastic fees, Donamol refused silence. She mobilized peers, summoned the school union, pleaded with management, and rallied church donations. She witnessed despair when one student tried to take her own life. She promised the girl she would sit for her exam despite all obstacles and fought to make that promise a reality.
Her leadership emerged in crisis. Suspended for 15 days following strikes and petitions, she refused to relent. Parents got involved; the management’s reputation was at stake. Finally, the school agreed to award annual scholarships to ten underprivileged scholars. Donamol was not just reinstated, but revered.
College tested her resolve in new ways: hunger, caretaking of her ill mother, whispers of blame following her friend’s suicide, and rumors that shattered nights. But she lectured others in justice, equality, and fairness. Little by little, she became more than a survivor; she became a symbol. Representing the student union, aligning briefly with larger political organizations, she fought to ensure no student felt voiceless.
Now migrated to London, completed her MBA, grown at McDonald’s from intern to shift manager, and married to a confidant who knows her scars, Donamol’s life is a declaration. Against poverty, stigma, and discrimination, she has built a path forward. Her name now signifies hope more than hardship.
The post Struggle, Scandal, Strength: Life Inside the Fight for Fairness by Donamol first appeared on HindustanMetro.com.

