Isn’t it encouraging to see a beautiful transformation?
When I visited Milton Simotweet Primary School on Mt. Elgon
for the first time, there was so much extreme poverty in that place. Children had
white and rust-colored hair, swollen stomachs, and painfully thin limbs, all
due to starvation.
Our team made the journey halfway up this mountain to the
school and our hearts broke as we saw orphans who were hungry and alone in the
world. Only a few years before, civil war had ravaged the mountain. Many adults
were killed and even more of the women died later on from AIDS given to them
through sexual assault. This left thousands of war and AIDS orphans on Mt.
Elgon and they were so, so needy.
The CRF program was newly established when I first visited. The
entire elementary school met in a single assembly room. Each wall was where two
classes gathered around each half of a blackboard. One staff member said it was
difficult for the children to know which teacher to listen to at a time—can you
imagine? 8 lessons taught aloud at once in the same room where hundreds of
children gathered to learn.
My team was served a loaf of bread that formality required
us to eat (okay, I may have still given mine to the little girl above wearing a
beanie). Meanwhile the children sat around and watched, empty-handed. There
wasn’t enough food to feed the orphans.
When I returned to Mt. Elgon in 2015, there was total
transformation. Classrooms and wonderful learning environments for the
children. Desks. Workbooks. Educational posters.
And when we gathered for the assembly, we all feasted—there was
enough food and soda for every single child there. The children looked
healthier and stronger. So much more laughter rang out than it had two years
before.
Tremendous hope can be found in Mt. Elgon—and a beautiful
transformation has taken place.
osmaniye
ReplyDeleterize
sakarya
samsun
sivas
MK3