Since I do not have access to a specific book titled exactly "Eteima Thu Naba" (as it may be a localized title, a lesser-known publication, or a specific user-generated story), I have written a new, original narrative based on the popular themes of Manipur social dramas often found in Facebook series and local literature.
Here is an original story titled "Eteima Thu Naba" (Part 10 - Facebook Part 2) written in Manipuri (Meetei Mayek) and English.
You might wonder: why Facebook? The answer lies in sharing habits. In Manipur, Facebook is still the primary social network. An eteima episode uploaded at 7 PM on a Friday gets shared instantly into family WhatsApp groups, local marketplace forums, and even school alumni pages. eteima thu naba part 10 facebook part 2 best
Many fans in areas with poor internet connectivity want to download the episode. While Facebook doesn’t allow direct downloads, here are legitimate ways:
Avoid third-party Facebook video downloader sites—they often serve malware or low-quality rips. Since I do not have access to a
Avoid videos shorter than 20 minutes (they are usually trimmed), or those with "Part 10 Part 1" mislabeled as "Part 2". The correct Segment 2 starts with a close-up of the mother holding a broken clay lamp.
For the uninitiated, Eteima Thu Naba (roughly translating to “Mother’s Suffering” or “The Plight of a Mother”) is a web-based drama series aired primarily via Facebook and YouTube. It focuses on the struggles of a middle-aged mother, played by a veteran actress from the local theatre scene, who faces betrayal, poverty, and societal neglect. Best times: Post when your audience is active
What sets the show apart is its raw dialogue and unflinching look at elder abandonment in modern Manipuri households. Each part is broken into two segments—Part 1 and Part 2—making the search for "part 10 facebook part 2" highly specific.
In Part 2, Eteima delivers a 3-minute monologue asking, "Was my suffering your ticket to freedom?" This dialogue was not in the original script—the actress improvised it after a real personal tragedy. Fans have re-shared this clip thousands of times, calling it "the heart of the series." The comment section under the Facebook post reads like a therapy session, with users sharing their own family estrangements.