Daughters Who Raised Mothers is a deeply human portrait of diaspora women navigating survival, responsibility, and identity in America-often quietly, often alone.Across kitchens, highways, hospital night shifts, and living rooms filled with silence, women who once left home as daughters find themselves becoming providers, decision-makers, drivers, interpreters, and caregivers-not only to their children, but to their aging mothers. In cultures where women were raised to support from behind the scenes, many now stand at the front, making decisions men once made, carrying burdens no one prepared them for.Drawing from lived experience, cultural memory, and careful observation, Dr. Jerry Yonga explores what happens when African and immigrant women adapt to American systems that reward independence but rarely recognize the cost of endurance. This book does not argue policy or offer quick solutions. Instead, it names realities often left unspoken: love that becomes labor, respect that flows in one direction, cultural expectations that collide with the law, and survival that leaves little room for rest.Through composite stories, intimate moments, and quiet truths, the book examines motherhood, caregiving, discipline, migration, work, faith, food, loneliness, and resilience-without romanticizing struggle or assigning blame. It honors strength while asking an honest question: What does survival take from the women who make it possible?This book is written for: Diaspora women who have carried families across bordersMothers and daughters navigating generational changeCaregivers and healthcare workersReaders interested in culture, migration, and lived experienceDaughters Who Raised Mothers is not a manual. It is a witness. And for many readers, it will feel like being seen for the first time.