Posts Tagged ‘sponsor children in Africa’

The Rewards of Sponsorship

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

By Beth Berman

I am back in Ghana at the Bishop Forson School Complex for my second year in a row. Last year I was focused on the work I had to do and to just getting a lay of the land, so to speak. Little by little over the 10 days in Kpando, I started to get to know some teachers and students to the point where I felt I was developing a relationship with them.

At the end of the trip, I decided to sponsor two children, Kpebu Bright, age 11, and Khaly Richard, age 15. When I said goodbye to them last year, my heart was divided. It was joyous for the time we had spent together but sad for having to take my leave. This past year  I wrote each boy and sent packages to let them know they were in my heart and in my thoughts, even though we were miles and continents apart. I reminded them in my letters that we always were looking at the same sun and the same moon, even though from a different vantage point.But the perspective we shared was a love for each other.

As we drove toward BFSC this year, I could barely contain my excitement over returning and upon seeing Richard and Bright walking toward me across the school field, my heart just burst with glee. After spending the first few days with them at school and working in the classroom, I decided to take them out to lunch in the town, an opportunity they never get.

As I was traveling in the cab with Richard and Bright, I felt a deep sense of contentment spread over me. I was back with my African children, back with their sweet smiles, their gracious ways, and their deep searching eyes and inquisitive minds. Those beautiful eyes reflected back to me my ever present searching for what my purpose on this Earth is. One clear answer is the raising and loving of my three children, Leslie, 24, Ali, 22 and Jeffrey (who came to Ghana with me last year), age 18. Secondly I know the work I do as a psychologist is also my calling. But sitting there with Richard and Bright and soaking in the amazing experiences I had last year and was again having this year, I knew that my third purpose on this Earth was to form a partnership with this community in Kpando, and specifically at BFSC, and particularly with Richard and Bright.

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Update from Shifra 2/13/10 – Partnering with other organizations!

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Aku Sika Shop is popular with the foreigners in Ho – missionaries and young volunteers. Our recent acquaintance with ProjectAbroad volunteers did a lot of good this week at Airfield School. They came to teach at the school, brought art supply for art projects. They will now include Airfield School in their program.

On Wednesday, their Outreach Medical Team arrived. One Ghanaian male nurse, four young European helpers. They sat a clinic in one of the "classroom". I was impressed with the amount of medical supply they brought. Looks like a well-funded NGO.

Eric, the nurse used no gloves. He screened all the kids at Airfield School, checking hands, mouth, ears, eyes, head, skin, glens,belly and looking for open wounds. He does not need blood test to identify Malaria. He looked at the eyes, sours around the mouth and high fever. He talked and joked with the kids. Funny young man. Doreen from the Netherlands handing the kids Vitamin C candies, Picaddely cookies and a note with the diagnoses, before they proceed to the "clinic". Robert, Ivor and Phillip from Holland were treating the kids.

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November 21, 2009 Airfield School update from Shifra Raz

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

I was waiting in the beat-up blue truck while it was being loaded with wood, tools and a wheelbarrow, watching the town passing by: children in ironed uniforms on the way to school, women in long colorful dresses balancing baskets full of loaves of white bread on the head, morning porridge was sold in plastic bags, sad faces, triple hand-shake ends with a snap, goats, chickens, fufu, banku, kenkey, mango, papaya,banana, and loudspeakers blurring something from moving trucks. Later we drove to Prosper’s farm and loaded the truck with cassava for the community and cassava leaves for the goats.

It takes a community. They are so poor. They live in small mud houses with no electricity or running water. They are small farmers like many others in the interior of Ghana. They eat mostly cassava and their kids suffer from malnutrition and infectious diseases.

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Report from Shifra Raz on newly sponsored children in Ghana and starting work on the Airfield School in Ho

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Grandmother Ennim, infant tied to her back, came to school to tell Mr. Forson that she cannot effort to sent her three granddaughters to school. She needs their help in the market. She sells salt at Torkor Harbor. Not much of a harbor: some fishing boats, food stalls, women doing their laundry and piles of trash. At home, the girls fetch the water, bring fire-wood, cook banku and fufu, clean and do the laundry.

Jemima (9), Evelyn (6), and Susie (4) all do very well at Bishop Forson School. The grandmother also needs them to care for the infant. She is going everyday to a near-by village, Fesi, bringing food to her daughter-in-law, who is staying at a praying camp. After school, Fortune (Bishop’s son) and I followed the girls to their home in Torkor. The face of poverty and misery. Rich land, poor people. Poverty everywhere. Mud homes, cement-block homes, rusty roofs, grass roofs.

sponsored children

 

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About Pagus:Africa

Our mission is to strengthen poor rural communities through targeted projects in education, health and poverty reduction. We believe the most effective ways to facilitate long term sustainable change is through education of children and through working with adults to build self reliance and sources for sustainable income. We seek to empower communities to improve their schools, water sources and health conditions.

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