Insight
That cleft lip should not traumatise your child
Devine Mukeshimana went into labour on November 11, last year, expecting to hold in her arms a bundle of joy. She got the bundle, Kelia Iradukunda, but not the joy. The cleaner at ASK Rwanda thought her world was crushed. Her agony was that baby Iradukunda was born with a cleft lip.“I was frightened the first time I saw my baby with a cleft, it took me a long time to accept the situation. Carrying this baby for nine months and then discovering its deformity was the most challenging moment in my life. I had the burden of accepting the fact that my child was deformed,” Mukeshimana said.