@aboukhodermassri: #القائد_سعد_المصري❤🔥

Mouhamad Massri
Mouhamad Massri
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Friday 03 July 2026 06:29:15 GMT
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In 2009, Patricia Noah was shot in the back of the head at close range by her ex-husband as she returned home from church. The bullet tore through her skull, shattered her cheekbone, and exited through her nose. Miraculously, it missed her spinal cord, her brain, and every major artery. She walked out of the hospital shortly after, still smiling. Yet, that wasn't even the hardest thing she had survived. Patricia Nombuyiselo Noah was born in 1964 in South Africa during the darkest years of apartheid. As a Black Xhosa woman, her life was defined by hardship from the start. But she was determined; she taught herself to type, mastered English, and chased dreams the law said she wasn't allowed to have. In 1984, she gave birth to a son. His father was a white Swiss-German man. Under the laws of apartheid, their relationship was illegal. In the eyes of the state, their child was a crime. She named him Trevor. To protect him, she kept him indoors for years. When they did venture out, she walked behind lighter-skinned friends, pretending to be the maid just so she could be near her own son. She raised him with unwavering faith, sharp humor, and fierce independence. She told him the world belonged to him, no matter what the government said. Years later, she married Abel Shingange. The marriage became a cycle of violence as he abused her and her children. After years of suffering, she finally divorced him in 1996. She rebuilt her life. She remarried. She believed the worst was behind her. Then, in 2009, her ex-husband lay in wait outside her home. As she returned from church, he shot her in the leg, and then he shot her in the back of the head. Doctors called her survival a miracle. The bullet missed her spinal cord by a hair. It missed her brain. It missed every vital vein and artery. It traveled through her head and exited through her left nostril. She survived. She healed. She walked out of that hospital with her spirit unbroken. Her attacker was later convicted of attempted murder. Her son, Trevor Noah, went on to become one of the most recognized comedians in the world—host of The Daily Show, a bestselling author, and a global voice for humor and perspective. In his memoir, Born a Crime, he wrote about the woman who hid him from a government that considered his existence a mistake. He wrote about the woman who taught him to laugh when life gave him every reason to cry. He called her his teammate, his best friend, and his hero. When people ask where his courage comes from, he gives the same answer every time:
In 2009, Patricia Noah was shot in the back of the head at close range by her ex-husband as she returned home from church. The bullet tore through her skull, shattered her cheekbone, and exited through her nose. Miraculously, it missed her spinal cord, her brain, and every major artery. She walked out of the hospital shortly after, still smiling. Yet, that wasn't even the hardest thing she had survived. Patricia Nombuyiselo Noah was born in 1964 in South Africa during the darkest years of apartheid. As a Black Xhosa woman, her life was defined by hardship from the start. But she was determined; she taught herself to type, mastered English, and chased dreams the law said she wasn't allowed to have. In 1984, she gave birth to a son. His father was a white Swiss-German man. Under the laws of apartheid, their relationship was illegal. In the eyes of the state, their child was a crime. She named him Trevor. To protect him, she kept him indoors for years. When they did venture out, she walked behind lighter-skinned friends, pretending to be the maid just so she could be near her own son. She raised him with unwavering faith, sharp humor, and fierce independence. She told him the world belonged to him, no matter what the government said. Years later, she married Abel Shingange. The marriage became a cycle of violence as he abused her and her children. After years of suffering, she finally divorced him in 1996. She rebuilt her life. She remarried. She believed the worst was behind her. Then, in 2009, her ex-husband lay in wait outside her home. As she returned from church, he shot her in the leg, and then he shot her in the back of the head. Doctors called her survival a miracle. The bullet missed her spinal cord by a hair. It missed her brain. It missed every vital vein and artery. It traveled through her head and exited through her left nostril. She survived. She healed. She walked out of that hospital with her spirit unbroken. Her attacker was later convicted of attempted murder. Her son, Trevor Noah, went on to become one of the most recognized comedians in the world—host of The Daily Show, a bestselling author, and a global voice for humor and perspective. In his memoir, Born a Crime, he wrote about the woman who hid him from a government that considered his existence a mistake. He wrote about the woman who taught him to laugh when life gave him every reason to cry. He called her his teammate, his best friend, and his hero. When people ask where his courage comes from, he gives the same answer every time: "My mother." Patricia Noah survived apartheid. She survived poverty. She survived domestic abuse and a bullet to the head. She survived a system designed to break her. Through every storm, she held on—not because life was easy, but because she believed love was stronger than fear. Today, she still lives in Johannesburg. She still laughs, she still prays, and she still inspires. The strongest people are not those who never fall; they are the ones who rise every single time. Patricia Noah rose. And because she did, the world gained a voice that makes millions laugh. #TrevorNoah #womenshistory

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