In a moving piece Roy's 19-year-old step-daughter, a second-year student at Johns Hopkins University wrote for CNN, she recounts the father she remembers and the brutal attack she's trying to forget.
"Though my dad worked as a computer programmer during the day, he was a writer when he came home. His books were about the science behind homosexuality and the virus of religious extremism. With the goal of incorporating more secular discussion into mainstream Bangladesh," she said.
Roy, 43, the Bangladeshi-American secular activist and blogger was hacked to death by radical Islamists on February 26, last year, in Dhaka, in which Ahmed's mother Rafida Ahmed also suffered head wounds and lost her left thumb.
On May 3, the al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent claimed responsibility for the attack.
Thirteen days later, she received messages informing her father was dead and her mother was in the ICU in Bangladesh.
That afternoon, she posted on Facebook: "My dad was a prominent Bengali writer, most famous for his books about science and atheism. 15 hours ago, Islamic fundamentalists stabbed my dad to death. My mom was severely wounded from the attack and is still in the hospital.
Recalling her struggle to fight with the memories of her father and his brutal murder, Trisha said: "To say that I'm furious or heartbroken would be an understatement. But as [screwed] up as the world is, there's never a reason to stop fighting to make it better. I'll carry the lessons he taught me and the love he gave me forever."
"By dying for his cause, he (Roy) gained worldwide attention to the oppression and murder of scientific thought in Bangladesh -- a country that claims to be governed by secular principles.
"I know that Al Qaeda, ISIS, and other manifestations of religious extremism are alive and well. But by writing and sharing my story, I am making my impact. I - and so many others - am slowly, thoughtfully, and certainly chipping away at the ideologies that seek to destroy us," she wrote in the blog-post.
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