In a quiet village in the Punjab region, there lived a kind woman named Savitri Devi, a widow since the age of thirty.
She devoted her life to raising her only son, Rajesh, by hand-weaving cloth and selling vegetables in the village market.
Her hands had become rough and her back had become bent over the years, but Savitri never complained about her hardships.
She always said:
“If my son becomes a man, no matter how difficult my life is, he will succeed.”
Because of that sacrifice, Rajesh received a good education and became a civil engineer in Chandigarh.
After securing a stable job, he married Priya, a beautiful but practical city girl. Initially, their life was quite peaceful, but as time passed, Priya began to feel that their old village home no longer “suited her new status.”
When Rajesh turned 35, they decided to build a large two-story villa on their ancestral land.
The small old brick house, where mother and son had seen many rainy and sunny seasons, was considered “dilapidated” and not suitable for Priya’s modern lifestyle.
One evening, over dinner, he said softly but firmly:
“Mom, when the villa is built, maybe you should move into the old house behind.
It will be quieter for you to live there alone, and we need space to have guests and work in the new house.”
Rajesh, despite feeling a little bad, nodded in agreement:
“Yes, Mom. I’ll have someone repair the old house, install tiles, and replace the roof for you.”
Savitri remained silent.
She didn’t want her son to live in any difficult circumstances, much less any family conflict.
So, the old house – where she used to hug Rajesh on rainy nights – now became their “private home” – just a few dozen steps away from the luxurious villa.
The old house’s roof was rebuilt and thickly painted, but it still looked empty.
Mrs. Savitri moved in, living alone.
Every morning, she would wake up early to tend the small vegetable garden, raise a few chickens, and then quietly light incense sticks for her husband.
Rajesh was busy with work and projects in the city, and rarely returned to the village.
Priya would occasionally come to ask a few handy questions. She would stop.
The only person who spoke to her regularly was her neighbor, Parvati, who often brought fresh milk.
As time passed, Mrs. Savitri’s hair turned gray. Her body was gaunt, but her eyes were gentle whenever she looked toward the villa—where her son and daughter-in-law were living the happy life she had dreamed of.
One winter morning, neighbors found Savitri collapsed in the garden.
She was taken to the district hospital, but when Rajesh and Priya rushed to her, she had stopped breathing.
Rajesh knelt beside the hospital bed, tears streaming down his face.
He suddenly realized—in all those years, he had never asked his mother if she was cold or lonely, nor had she invited him to the villa for a nice meal together.
After the funeral, Rajesh returned to the small house where his mother lived.
The atmosphere in the old room was strangely quiet. It was.
While cleaning, she found a small, old wooden box tied with hemp rope under the bed.
She opened it. It contained neither money nor gold, but a savings book in Rajesh’s name – containing the equivalent of 700,000 rupees.
She knew this was the money her mother had saved all her life – by selling every bunch of vegetables, every meter of cloth, every egg.
Near the book was a letter written in shaky handwriting.
“Rajesh,
This is the little money I’ve saved for you and Priya – so you can take care of the future and the grandson I’ve always been waiting for.
I don’t need a big house, because this old house is where I was happiest with you.
As long as you live a good life, love your wife and children, I’m happy.
– I love you, Savitri Devi.”
At the bottom was a small silver bracelet, the only wedding gift her husband had given her before he died.
Holding the bracelet, Rajesh shivered, remembering his childhood days – when his mother would wear it, place a cloth on his shoulder, and sing lullabies to him.
Tears welled up in his eyes.
He realized that his mother had endured the cold, the heat, the loneliness… just so he could live a better life.
Rajesh brought the box back to the villa and told Priya everything.
For the first time, she remained silent for a long time, her eyes red.
“You were wrong, Rajesh… I didn’t know your mother had sacrificed so much,” Priya choked.
Rajesh held his wife’s hand and sighed:
“It wasn’t just me. I was wrong too. All her life, she only wanted to be with her son, but I left her alone.”
He decided to use all the money his mother left him, and his savings, to rebuild the old house and named it “Savitri Bhawan” – Mother Savitri’s Home.
It became a place for the village’s poor children, where they could learn to read and write, get clothes, and eat a hot meal every day – something his mother always wanted.
Every evening, Rajesh would sit on the veranda of “Savitri Bhawan,” looking up at the starry Punjab sky, and softly say,
“Mother, forgive me. I know you have forgiven me, but I haven’t forgiven myself.”
He carried his mother’s silver bracelet in his pocket, to remember throughout his life that a mother’s love is the most sacred thing, and that carelessness is a sin that cannot be compensated.
As the years passed, white jasmine flowers—Savitri’s favorite—populated the backyard garden.
Every time the flowers’ fragrance wafted, Rajesh would smile.
Because he believed his mother was somewhere, still silently watching him and smiling as before.
Final message:
In India, where children are taught that “Mother is God,”
perhaps the greatest tragedy in life
is not poverty or failure—
but abandoning a mother in the love she gave.
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