A boy called Panyim grows up in a world where home builds you, and war tests you. He learns the rhythms of family life, hunger, and discipline long before he learns the language of cities. He watches people move, scatter, and rebuild. He studies, teaches, serves, and keeps searching for a life that holds together.
After 2013, his story sharpens. The civil war breaks out while his family is stranded in Juba. Roads close. Plans collapse. Conflict enters the nation and the home. Children are born across towns, camps, and borders, each birth marking a new responsibility, and a new cost. This book is a creative nonfiction autobiography rooted in real people, real places, and real events. It is not a polished fairytale. It is a truthful account of survival, faith, fatherhood, regret, and the decision to stop repeating what destroys peace. Inside, you will experience: A family caught by the December 2013 crisis in Juba and forced to retreatThe hard work of teaching and serving while trying to hold a home togetherA father's moral and practical battles, including the weight of decisions made under pressureThe scattered geography of a family across Yei, Kakuma, Maaji, Juba, and NairobiA final turning toward truth, discipline, and a life built on purpose
If you believe truth telling is healing, this story was written for you.