In Odugbeho village in Agatu, Benue State, women live with the ruins of massacres that wiped out families, farmlands, and homes, yet left no arrests, trials, or compensation behind. They mourn husbands and sons, raise children in displacement camps, and rebuild life under mango trees with makeshift classrooms and shared songs. Branded by fear but driven by resilience, they farm, teach, organize, and testify, even when formal justice systems ignore their pain. Their story is a powerful resistance, insisting that their dead be remembered, their land protected, and their voices finally heard.