BIZARRE

Road Tragedy Follows Radio Show Confession

A tragic fate befell a Chegutu mother just days after she spoke her truth on a live radio show, exposing what she believed to be dark forces lurking within her family.

The price of revelation was steep—her three-year-old daughter, Sasha, was taken in a cruel twist of fate, lost to a road accident that left only grief in its wake.

Last Tuesday, Mai Sasha appeared on Tilder Live Show, a program dedicated to unraveling the eerie and the unexplainable.

The topic was sinister: the torment of a family plagued by alleged goblins, creatures said to be wielded by their grandmother to control and punish.

As she spoke, she reportedly entered a trance, her voice not entirely her own, and a chilling prophecy was uttered: she would suffer for unveiling these secrets.

Three days later, the prophecy materialized. On her way back to Chegutu, the car she was traveling in crashed.

Mai Sasha in hospital after the accident
Mai Sasha in hospital after the accident

Sasha, the little girl who had only days before played innocently in the radio studio, did not survive.

The mother, now a vessel of sorrow, was released from the hospital to mourn her child, who was laid to rest in the cold embrace of the earth.

But this story is deeper than one tragic loss. It is a generational curse, a shadow looming over the Dzapasi family from Murewa, a family that has long whispered of invisible tormentors.

They speak of nightly violations, of unseen hands stealing their purity and futures. Five daughters, bound by blood and suffering, claim they have never known true rest.

The goblins, they say, take what they want.

“We have tried everything,” Mai Dzapasi, the matriarch, weeps. “Prophets, traditional healers, prayers… But the torment continues. My children cannot marry. They cannot keep jobs. We are drowning in despair.”

According to Hmetro, their affliction is not just spiritual but physical. They describe unseen forces moving beneath their skin, phantom pains that doctors cannot diagnose.

One sister recounts the suffocating grip on her throat, a feeling of something alive, slithering, yet unseen.

Another tells of a child she lost under mysterious circumstances—one moment alive, the next lifeless, with only unanswered questions remaining.

Even the show’s host, the seasoned Tete Tilder, found herself at the mercy of inexplicable events.

Midway through the broadcast, her phone—charged and functioning—shut off abruptly and never turned back on. A mere coincidence? Or a warning from forces beyond understanding?

The Dzapasi family now stands at the precipice of despair, their cries echoing unanswered into the void.

They need salvation, but who will grant it? Sangomas, prophets, healers—they have sought them all, yet the shadows persist. And with April, the “month of death” they have been warned of, looming ahead, fear grips their hearts.

“We have lost hope,” they admit. “We are tired.”

A mother mourns her child. A family drowns in curses. And the unseen whispers continue, relentless and unyielding.

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