Thursday, January 10, 2013

Gone Too Soon





Gone Too Soon: Fawzia Braine (1948 – 2012)

We traveled together from Hong Kong on January 6. Sitting in the veranda of our village home, we watched birds in the garden. To our delight, the Asian Paradise Flycatcher, a dazzling migratory bird with two long white tail streamers, made an appearance. There would be a flash of white across the greenery, and, like a little girl, Fawzia would be off running beneath the mango and cashew trees, trying to catch a closer view of the bird.

Then, we spent a week at our Hantana home, where monkeys came to steal the mangoes and avocados and porcupines and wild boar visited at night to feast on the fallen fruit. A soft mist covered the green hills and the city of Kandy glittered below at night. We went for long evening walks, chatted with the monk at the nearby temple, and dined out with old friends. Life couldn’t have been better.

I had no inkling of the tragedy that was to follow. Fawzia died on January 28, 2012, of injuries caused by a car accident.

She was the devoted wife who sacrificed her career to accompany me to the Middle East, to the USA, and finally to Hong Kong. To our son, Fawzia was the adoring mother, the epitome of unconditional love. To her elderly relatives, siblings, and cousins, she was the loving niece and sister, loyal and generous to a fault. To her nieces and nephews, she was the adventurous aunt who traveled the world. To an American colleague, Fawzia was “intelligent, cosmopolitan, knowledgeable, and politically liberal. She had a work ethic at a university where few seemed to have one. She was fun: always open to going out and doing something interesting.” Her doctor in Hong Kong, also an artist, painted a remarkable portrait interpreting Fawzia’s love of Sri Lanka and her religious beliefs. Tributes poured in to a blog site that was set up in her memory.
  
In 2000, when she was diagnosed with breast cancer, we saw another side of Fawzia. She fought the cancer with fortitude and resolve, facing surgery, the harrowing side effects of chemotherapy, and numerous other medical procedures without self-pity or complaint. She had completed ten years of follow-up treatment and had been declared cancer-free when the fatal accident occurred. That only heightened the tragedy of her passing.

Fawzia did not make headlines. She didn’t move mountains. She wasn’t perfect. But she left a lasting impression on everyone who met her. Her exuberance, energy, and zest for life were unmatched in her extended family or mine.

A year after her passing, we are left only with memories and grief