Kenya, July 15, 2026 - When Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) officers arrived at a homestead in Ademasajida village in Wajir West, they expected to collect a protected wild bird.
Instead, they found a mother saying goodbye to a member of her family.
As the officers gently led away Aisha a fully grown Somali ostrich, Mama Amina Aden could no longer hold back her tears. Her hands reached out one last time for the bird she had rescued, fed and raised from a helpless chick during one of northern Kenya's worst droughts.
"I love this bird. She is part of my family," she said between sobs.
"I raised her with love, commitment and sacrifice during the drought. I would still prefer to keep her, but the law will not allow it. It is painful to see her gone."
For more than a year, Aisha had become more than an ostrich. She had become a companion, a source of hope during difficult times, and a symbol of survival.
The story began during the devastating drought that swept across Wajir, killing thousands of livestock and leaving wildlife struggling to survive.
Mama Amina found the abandoned ostrich chick, believed to have been only a few days old. Instead of leaving it to die, she took it home.
With little food available even for her own family, she fed the tiny bird, sheltered it and watched it grow.
She named it Aisha
Neighbours grew accustomed to seeing the ostrich walking around the compound, following its caregiver and living peacefully alongside people.
But as Aisha matured, it became clear that the bird belonged to a protected wildlife species.
Under Kenya's Wildlife Conservation and Management Act, wild animals cannot be kept without the necessary licences and permits.
KWS officials explained that the Somali ostrich is considered a protected species and that the bird had to be relocated to a wildlife sanctuary, where it could live among other ostriches and contribute to conservation breeding.
The officers praised Mama Amina for saving the bird's life but said the law required that it be returned to an appropriate habitat.
For Mama Amina, however, the legal explanation did little to ease the emotional pain.
The farewell, captured on video, has since spread widely across social media, touching thousands of Kenyans.
The incident has sparked debate over whether ordinary citizens who rescue wild animals should be given an opportunity to obtain licences to continue caring for them.
Prominent hotelier Mohamed Hersi questioned whether KWS could have allowed Mama Amina to apply for a permit instead of removing the ostrich.
He noted that ostriches are legally farmed in several parts of Kenya under KWS licensing programmes and argued that a rescued, non-dangerous bird presented an opportunity to explore community-based wildlife care.
"Kenya already has a licensing pathway for exactly this kind of relationship between citizen and wildlife," he wrote.
"We should be using that pathway to reward communities who step in when nature fails, not simply reclaiming what they built with their own hands and hearts."
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Garissa Woman Representative Amina Udgoon Siyad described Mama Amina's actions as an extraordinary act of kindness deserving recognition.
"This mother did not just raise an ostrich; she nurtured it with love until it became family," she said.
"As a woman leader, I am deeply touched by her humanity. Such kindness deserves to be recognised."
She pledged to personally reward Mama Amina for her compassion.
Journalist and psychologist Adow Jubat said the emotional scenes reflected genuine grief that many people underestimate.
"This woman rescued the ostrich when it was just two days old and raised it until adulthood," he said.
"Losing anyone or anything with whom you have formed a deep emotional bond can trigger grief."
He suggested that Mama Amina should receive psychosocial support to help her cope with the separation.
Beyond the emotional farewell lies a broader conservation challenge.
The Somali ostrich (Struthio molybdophanes) is native to the Horn of Africa and faces increasing threats from habitat degradation, prolonged drought and illegal hunting. Conservation authorities encourage rescued wildlife to be returned to protected habitats whenever possible to preserve wild populations.
For conservationists, Aisha's transfer offers the bird an opportunity to live among its own kind and eventually breed.
For Mama Amina, however, the sanctuary is many kilometres away from the home where Aisha took her first steps.
The empty space in her compound is a daily reminder of the bird she saved, loved and ultimately surrendered.
As Aisha disappeared into the KWS truck, Mama Amina stood quietly, tears streaming down her face.
She had done what the law required.
But, like many parents watching a child leave home, she could not help feeling that a piece of her heart had gone with her.