Daudar Gora 1 Complete Hausa Novel

Daudar Gora 1 Complete Hausa Novel

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  • It has been three weeks since everything happened, yet nothing has faded from their hearts. Strength has weakened, as though all energy has drained from their bodies. The world has become one of hardship—hardship so deep that it would be difficult to forget even with one’s last breath. Their happiness has become the price for easing the worries of others—people who only care about themselves and look down on those beneath them. If power truly rested in the hands of every soul in real life, she would have been the first woman in the world to possess a force capable of shaking the hearts of every kind of oppressor.

    Before the passing of these three sorrow‑filled weeks, the life of Malam Zayyan’s household had been like a diamond set in pure gold. It is not wealth that is being spoken of here, for they considered riches the weakest of things when it came to joy or fulfillment. What is being spoken of is a complete family bound by pure, untainted love. They cried when one of them cried, laughed when one of them was happy, cared for one another in sickness, and became everything to each other when everything felt like one and the same in their hands.

    Ruman was a great land located in the middle of a vast island, in a century long past. It was a country rich in gold within the African continent. The land of Ruman had a powerful empire made up of great kings with deep and varied histories—stories that would never fade from the world. Gold was not their only wealth; they also had many kinds of crops, fertile farmland, and livestock that were traded with other nations or brought into the country for purchase. The people of this land were striking in appearance, dignified and graceful, though despite the beauty many possessed, there were also those of simpler looks. Like any country, they had many religions and ethnic groups, but the dominant tribe spoke the Rumanci language, and Islam was the most powerful and widespread religion among them.

    What was most remarkable about Ruman was that despite the strength and dominance of Islam, they still held tightly to the traditions of their ancestors—especially the concept of power and authority. Power carried immense influence in Ruman. Their customs and the prestige of their royal institutions played a major role in resisting the impact of what the Europeans brought to them, aside from Western education. Even though they too fell under colonial rule a century ago, no authority ever held more influence than their traditional rulers—from ancient times up to the present day, where they continued to live under the rule of their own monarchs within the broader system of colonial governance.

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