He did not burn the letter or bury it. He read it aloud under the mango tree, surrounded by seventy-two women holding pens. They applauded not for him, but for the mother they never met—whose unfinished sentence had become a movement.
That unfinished sentence became the blueprint for “අම්මා වෙනුවෙන් 2.” අම්මා වෙනුවෙන් 2
Two years after the first “For Mother” campaign brought solar lamps to a rural village cut off from the grid, its founder, Saman , stood at the same dusty crossroads. The first project had been a tribute to his own mother, who had passed away reading by a kerosene lamp that caught fire. But the sequel— For Mother, Part 2 —was not about lamps. It was about a letter he never finished writing. He did not burn the letter or bury it
The idea began when Saman found a worn envelope in his mother’s old trunk. Inside was a letter she had started but never sent to him while he was studying abroad. The letter read: “My dear son, I am proud, but I am also tired. The village women have no place to learn. If you ever return, build not for me, but for them.” It was about a letter he never finished writing
Unlike the first phase, which focused on energy, the second phase focused on education and health . Saman learned from local data that in his home district, 68% of mothers over 40 had never held a pen. Many suffered from untreated high blood pressure and diabetes—not because medicine was unavailable, but because no one had explained prevention in their native tongue, with respect for their time.