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The envelope arrived on a Tuesday morning, thin and official-looking, the kind that never brings good news. It was addressed to my grandmother in block letters, her name spelled correctly but stripped of warmth, as if it belonged to a stranger.

“Notice of Record Review.”

That was all it said on the front.

My grandmother held it with careful hands, the same hands that had braided my hair, kneaded bread every Sunday, and signed her name hundreds of times over a lifetime of work. She stared at the envelope for a long moment before handing it to me.

“I don’t like this,” she said quietly.

She was right not to.

A Life Reduced to a File

The letter inside was cold and precise. According to the records office, there were “inconsistencies” in her documentation. Her residency status was under review. Certain files, they claimed, could not be verified.

In simpler terms, they were saying this:

According to us, your life may not have happened.

My grandmother was eighty-six years old.

She had paid taxes. Raised children. Buried a husband. Worked three jobs when food was scarce and hope was thinner. She had survived war, displacement, and decades of silence.

And now a system had decided she was a mistake.

The Beginning of Erasure

It started small.

Her pension payments were “temporarily paused.”
Her health coverage was flagged.
A clerk at the municipal office told her, without looking up, “You don’t appear in the earlier databases.”

Earlier databases.

As if history began the moment someone decided to digitize it.

“She must have used a different name,” one official suggested.
“Records from that period are unreliable,” said another.
“We can’t confirm she existed then,” a third concluded.

Each sentence chipped away at her identity.

Each visit ended with her coming home quieter.

Watching Her Shrink

I noticed the change before she did.

She stopped correcting people when they mispronounced her name. She stopped telling stories about her youth, about the village she fled, the river she crossed, the child she carried on her back through winter.

One night I found her sitting at the kitchen table, surrounded by old photographs.

“What are you doing?” I asked.

“Trying to remember myself,” she replied.

That was the moment I understood: this wasn’t paperwork.

This was erasure.

The System’s Confidence

When we went to the records office together, they treated us like inconveniences. We were handed numbers. Told to wait. Directed from one desk to another like misplaced objects.

A man in a suit finally spoke to us.

“Your grandmother’s earliest documents begin in 1972,” he said. “There’s nothing verifiable before that.”

“She was alive before 1972,” I said.

He nodded politely. “That’s not what the system shows.”

My grandmother sat silently beside me, her shoulders curved inward, as if she were already being folded out of existence.

Then he added the sentence that changed everything.

“Especially considering she supposedly gave birth to her first child in 1964.”

Supposedly.

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