Unlike the first phase, which focused on energy, the second phase focused on education and health . Saman learned from local data that in his home district, 68% of mothers over 40 had never held a pen. Many suffered from untreated high blood pressure and diabetes—not because medicine was unavailable, but because no one had explained prevention in their native tongue, with respect for their time.
He did not burn the letter or bury it. He read it aloud under the mango tree, surrounded by seventy-two women holding pens. They applauded not for him, but for the mother they never met—whose unfinished sentence had become a movement.
Two years after the first “For Mother” campaign brought solar lamps to a rural village cut off from the grid, its founder, Saman , stood at the same dusty crossroads. The first project had been a tribute to his own mother, who had passed away reading by a kerosene lamp that caught fire. But the sequel— For Mother, Part 2 —was not about lamps. It was about a letter he never finished writing.
By the end of the year, the district health office reported a 22% drop in emergency hypertension cases among women over 45. More strikingly, the local exam pass rate for children rose—because mothers could now help with homework.