“I WAS 16 WHEN I PICKED UP A GUN. NOW THE WAR STILL LIVES INSIDE MY HEAD.” 💔
Former child soldier reveals the hidden trauma haunting an entire generation as Somalia’s psychological crisis remains largely ignored.
From the outside, Somalia’s capital appears to be rebuilding.
New roads stretch across parts of Mogadishu. Businesses have reopened. Restaurants serve customers late into the evening. Streetlights illuminate roads that were once battlefields.
But for many survivors of Somalia’s long-running conflict, the deepest scars remain invisible.
One of them is 34-year-old Yusuf Ali.
Today, Ali runs a small shop and is raising a young family. Yet almost every day he is forced to relive memories from a childhood shaped by war, death, and violence.
At just 14 years old, Ali found himself caught in the chaos that engulfed Somalia after Ethiopian forces entered the country in 2006.
What followed would permanently change his life.\
The night everything changed
Ali remembers hearing military aircraft overhead as fighting intensified around Mogadishu.
Then came the shelling.
One night, explosions struck near his family’s home.
Buildings shook.
People screamed.
As residents rushed to help victims trapped beneath rubble, Ali came face-to-face with a sight that still haunts him years later.
A young girl, roughly his own age, lay motionless among the destruction.
Nothing had prepared him for that moment.
Soon afterward, his family fled to a displacement camp outside the city, hoping to escape the violence.
Instead, Ali found himself surrounded by messages urging young boys to join the fight.
Becoming a child soldier
Fueled by anger, fear, and powerful messages delivered through local networks, Ali eventually joined an armed resistance group.
At 16, he was handling weapons and participating in urban combat.
He recalls moving through Mogadishu’s streets, exchanging gunfire with government forces and Ethiopian troops.
Sometimes the bodies of fallen fighters were teenagers like himself.
Yet amid the chaos, there was little time to reflect.
“It was either kill or be killed,” he later recalled.
Years later, Ali would come to question everything.
A city rebuilt, a generation forgotten
When Ali eventually returned to Mogadishu after several years abroad, he found a city transformed.
But beneath the new construction and signs of recovery remained a generation struggling with untreated trauma.
Many former child soldiers never received counseling.
Others turned to drugs to cope with memories of war.
Mental health remains heavily stigmatized in many communities, leaving countless survivors to suffer in silence.
The hidden crisis
Human-rights advocates warn that Somalia faces a largely overlooked mental-health emergency.
Years of conflict have left children, families, and former fighters carrying deep psychological wounds.
Experts say untreated trauma increases the risk of depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and further cycles of violence.
Yet access to professional support remains extremely limited.
For many survivors, prayer, family, and personal resilience remain the only available coping mechanisms.
“The fighting never really ended”
Today, Ali is married and raising a young son.
But reminders of the past surround him everywhere.
He still recognizes buildings where battles once took place.
He remembers streets stained with blood.
And he wonders how many people walk past those places without knowing what happened there.
As Somalia continues rebuilding, Ali hopes future generations will not endure what his generation experienced.
Because while the world often measures recovery through buildings and infrastructure, survivors know the real battle continues long after the gunfire ends.
For Yusuf Ali and thousands like him, the war may be over.
But the memories remain.
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