Four-year-old Zaharau was hit by shrapnel. It took at least an hour to drive her and the other wounded to the nearest hospital in Kaduna city.
Although she underwent surgery, her wound still hasn't fully healed.
"When my daughter and the others that got injured were at the hospital, they were well taken care of. We thank the government for that.
"But things changed after they got discharged, months later. The hospital has refused to continue with their [free] treatment. They keep giving us excuses."
Walking around Tudunbiri, there is hardly a family not affected by the tragedy of that fateful night.
Twenty-year-old Aisha Buhari lost three of her younger brothers. She survived, suffering an injury to her left arm that is yet to heal.
Sitting on a stool, she cried and wiped her tears with her hijab as she recalled the last moments of her brothers.
"That night, I just finished talking with them and stepped away for a moment when the first bomb hit, only for me to see their dead bodies on the ground moments later," Ms Buhari said.
"When they rushed me to the hospital, I could not think of anything but my brothers. I cried so much."
As Ms Buhari spoke, she paused to wipe the pus oozing from her wound.
"There was no house or farm task I could not do before the incident, but now I can’t do anything properly. I depend on people to help with something as basic as washing clothes," she said.