
The woman left her boyfriend to marry an African man from the wild flame 😲😲 They lived in a hut in the middle of the savannah, without even the most basic amenities like hot water or a gas stove 😢 Shortly after the wedding, their daughter was born, who inherited her father’s appearance 😲
The article below the photo shows what the child of this unusual couple looks like 👇👇
In 1987, a young Swiss woman named Corinne Hofmann traveled with her fiancé Marco to distant, exotic Kenya – on a safari they had long dreamed of. But there, she didn’t meet him.
Tall, proud posture, skin the color of red clay – he stood by the fire of the Samburu tribe, close relatives of the Maasai.
His name was Lketinga Leparmoryio. One glance was enough to fall in love. The woman left her boyfriend for the African man.
But starting a relationship with a man from a tribe living by ancient traditions turned out to be far less romantic than she had imagined.
Lketinga was stern and straightforward. When she complained – about the heat, the flies, or the strange customs – he responded calmly, almost indifferently:
— If you don’t like it, go back to your Marco.
But Corinne was stubborn. She sold her business in Switzerland, gave up her previous life, and moved to a Kenyan village where she opened a small grocery shop.
Over time, she obtained citizenship and became accepted among the Samburu – as much as that was possible.
A new life began. A straw hut (manyatta), a kerosene lamp, cold water, washing by hand, no familiar comforts, no medicine, not even toilet paper. But she accepted it all.
When their daughter Napirai was born, everything changed. It was as if a demon had possessed Lketinga. He suspected the child wasn’t his.
He grew jealous – especially of the men who came into the shop.
Two years later, in 1990, Corinne couldn’t take it anymore. She took her daughter and fled back to Europe – to peace and order, far from cruelty and distrust.
Corinne Hofmann with her daughter today
Fifteen years passed. In 2005, while working on a film based on her book, Corinne returned to Kenya. She met the now older Lketinga.
And strangely enough, he had almost forgotten her escape. Over the years, he had married three times and continued living his own life.