Her name was Lira.
A quiet woman from a small village where the sun burned the earth, where life moved slowly… yet pain moved fast.
She had no wealth.
No opportunity.
But she had something the world often forgets to value: a pure soul and hands that could create miracles.Since childhood, Lira felt different.
While other kids ran through fields, laughing and shouting, she sat under trees weaving tiny shapes from leaves, grass, and thin strips of palm.
Her mother used to say:
— “Lira, art won’t put food on the table. Forget these things.”
But she couldn’t forget.
Art was the only thing that made her feel alive.
Years passed.
Lira grew up in the quiet corners of a world that did not know how to appreciate her. She worked on the land every morning, but every night, when everyone else slept, she sat on the floor of her small wooden house and created art.
She wove birds.
She wove flowers.
She wove dreams, hopes, and all the feelings she had no words for.
But still… no one cared.
No one asked.
No one valued it.
One year, the village prepared for a small market fair. Lira gathered her courage, collected a few of her woven creations, and placed them neatly on a cloth in a small corner.
She waited.
And waited.
People passed by.
Some glanced.
But no one stopped.
A few laughed softly under their breath.
Others shook their heads as if they had seen something useless.
Lira kept her hands folded in her lap, forcing back tears.
A small child approached, fascinated by a green woven peacock. He held it gently, turning it in his little hands as if he had found a treasure.
But his mother pulled him away.
— “These things have no value. Put it down.”
The child obeyed, placing it on the ground with the sadness only children can express — pure, unhidden, honest.