Out Of The Darkness: 10-year-old Alima’s Cataract Story
Today, 10-year-old Alima runs freely through her rural village in Mali, exploring places and experiencing the world in full for the very first time. Sometimes, she moves so quickly that her mother has to remind her to slow down.
Just a few months ago, that would have been impossible.
When Alima was only 40 days old, her mother Founey Coulibaly noticed something was wrong with her eyes. As years passed, the family searched desperately for answers, spending what little money they had on treatments that failed to improve her condition. Throughout her childhood, Alima lived with severely impaired vision, relying on her mother, father, and older sister for daily care.
“We tried all kinds of treatments and medications, but nothing worked,” Founey recalled. “I worried all the time. Sometimes I couldn’t sleep at night thinking about what her life would be like.”
For nine years, no one ever told the family that Alima was suffering from cataracts in both eyes.
While cataracts are often associated with aging, they can also affect children. Factors linked to poverty, malnutrition, and environmental conditions contribute to high rates of cataract-related blindness in Mali and other developing countries.
Cataracts can often be corrected through a simple surgical procedure that takes less than 15 minutes. Yet for many families living in remote communities, access to specialized eye care remains out of reach. Without diagnosis and treatment, otherwise-healthy children and adults can spend years living with preventable blindness, unable to attend school, earn a living, or live independently.
When Embrace Relief’s mobile clinic reached Alima’s village earlier this year, our team of trained medical professionals quickly identified the cause of her vision loss and scheduled surgery at no cost to her family. The procedure took only minutes, and within weeks her life had been transformed forever. Before surgery, Alima rarely ventured beyond the yard surrounding her home. Today, her mother says, she is a completely different child.
“Before the surgery, she couldn’t go far. She just played a little in the yard,” her mother said. “But now, she goes wherever she wants. She even runs around, and sometimes I have to tell her to slow down.”
To address this need, Embrace Relief’s Mobile Medical Clinic travels to underserved communities across Mali, providing free eye examinations and cataract surgeries to patients who might otherwise never receive care. Alima is one of 1450 people whose lives have been changed forever by a free cataract surgery provided by Embrace Relief’s Mobile Medical Clinic in Mali since the start of 2025.
For the first time, Alima could recognize colors, distinguish objects, and see details that had previously been hidden from her. Tasks that once required constant assistance — from dressing herself to navigating her surroundings — have become part of her daily routine.
Alima’s world changed because one person chose to make a life-changing gift to a person in need. And the impact of that gift extends far beyond improved vision. Restored sight enables children to attend school, adults to return to work, and older individuals to regain their independence. Families are relieved of caregiving burdens, household incomes improve, and entire communities benefit when people can fully participate in daily life.
Today, Alima’s mother can look toward the future with optimism rather than uncertainty. She hopes more families will have the same opportunity.
“I really hope this project continues and expands,” she said. “A project that provides free consultations and surgeries is priceless. My gratitude goes to the initiators of this project. May God help and strengthen them, and enable them to extend this initiative to more places in Mali and beyond.”
Every donation to Embrace Relief’s Cure Cataract program helps make stories like Alima’s possible. A procedure that takes only minutes can provide decades of independence, opportunity, and hope. For thousands of people still waiting for treatment, it represents the chance to see the world clearly — and to build a brighter future.
For more information, or to support this project, visit Embracerelief.org.
How You Can Help: The Gift of Sight
A simple cataract surgery, which costs only $120, can transform a life. With your support, our Embrace Relief’s health clinics can provide these surgeries to those in need, giving them the gift of sight and the opportunity for a better future. Here’s how your donation can make a difference:
- $120 Donation: Funds one complete cataract surgery, restoring sight to an individual in need.
- $240 Donation: Supports two surgeries, doubling the impact.
- $600 Donation: Helps five people regain their vision, enhancing their quality of life and ability to contribute to their communities.
Your donation can make a significant difference in the lives of those suffering from cataracts in Mali and Burkina Faso. For just $120, you can fund a cataract surgery and give someone the precious gift of sight.
Help us light up lives and drive away the darkness caused by cataracts. Donate now and be a part of this life-changing mission.












