Ghanaian travel icon Wode Maya recently revealed that he and his Kenyan wife Miss Trudy lost six pregnancies over five years before their 2025 miracle.
In a tear-jerking interview shared on Thursday, January 15, 2025 the Ghanaian superstar revealed that Miss Trudy (Trudy Juma), spent years in the shadows of grief.
According to Maya, the couple endured six heartbreaking miscarriages and a devastating medical diagnosis in 2021 that claimed they would never have children.
“September 2021 — we were told we couldn’t have children,” Maya shared in a moving social media post.
“Through every challenge, every loss, and every tear, our journey is a testimony of resilience.”
Wode Maya is now turning his personal pain into a massive philanthropic drive.
He has pledged to raise $1 million (Ksh129,410,000) specifically to provide financial support for young couples who are navigating the physical and emotional trauma of miscarriage but lack the funds for medical intervention.

“I am going to use my platform to educate people, and I am ready to raise one million dollars to support young couples who are going through miscarriage and they have no funds,” Maya stated. “I am going to take it upon myself to fund such people.”
The miracle of 2025
The announcement comes just days after the couple broke their long social media silence to reveal they had finally “welcomed hope” with a successful pregnancy in 2025.
The journey has been particularly symbolic for the pair; Maya proposed to Trudy in December 2021, just three months after their “infertility” diagnosis, and they wed in September 2022—on the exact anniversary of the death of Miss Trudy’s mother.
“After 6 heartbreaking miscarriages over the years, in 2025, we became pregnant again,” Wode Maya revealed, describing the moment as a victory of “faith over fear.”

For the millions of followers who have watched their cross-border romance, the revelation adds a layer of depth to their high-profile marriage.
Miss Trudy, who had taken a hiatus from social media to “grieve privately,” admitted the toll was almost too much to bear.
“I had been so depressed, lost hope in God,” she confessed in a candid YouTube video.
“I needed time… it was the hardest period of my life, but my husband never gave up.”
As Wode Maya begins his global fundraising drive, he is shifting the narrative from private struggle to public empowerment.
For the millions of young Africans watching, the message is clear: the journey doesn’t end with a loss—it begins with the fight to ensure no other couple has to face the “silence” alone.
