Finally we had our first day at the orphanage! Our taxi
driver Valence picked us up at the hotel and we made our way through the quite
busy streets of Arusha and the last bit through a muddy road in the slums. Any
other 4x4 driver in the UAE would have given up in these roads I guess, but it’s
amazing what a little old normal car can manage! Although obviously living in
bitter poverty, you don’t see any bitter faces, this is simply striking and
tells you a lot about life, appreciation and relativity of life….
When we arrived, Alice and Julius, the founders of the
orphanage, welcomed us warmly and told us a thousand times how grateful they
are that we are here and what the management team at Sheraton made possible.
Sitting in their ‘living room’, a rough concrete wall, mud floors with one carpet
and two sofas, we discussed our procedures for the next days, planned the
expenses for the veranda and how to get started this week.
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| living room |
We wondered how to
find out the size of the children’s feet. And here we go with the result:
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| all feet drawn on paper |
Talking about their background a bit, Alice told us that she
grew up with a mother that was an volunteer herself, teaching in schools. Alice
got involved quite heavily and made this volunteer teaching her mission. Soon
she found out that many kids have absolutely nothing for themselves, many of
their fathers got re-married after their moms died and they were not accepted
in the new family anymore, ending up being used for the household chores and
child care. This leaves them without education, quite a lack of affection and
often beaten by older members of the family. This made Alice decide to set up
an orphanage by herself, enabling those kids access to education and at least
for a few hours a day – affection and love. There are some children in
the orphanage with no parents, having been infected by HIV themselves and lost
their parents to this disease.
In 2003, she and her husband started with a small basic
classroom, as in the picture below.
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| initial classroom |
There was no food, there was no supplies, nothing. Volunteers
started to come along and with this, publicity started to rise. With the
foundation of the ‘Glorious Orphanage’ charity organization, properly
registered with the government, the fundraising could start and the orphanage
as it is today was built in 2007, using the funds for building the new class
rooms, medicine supply, building a kitchen, paying the food for all kids and
the salaries of the teachers. In the beginning, many children were too sick to
go to school, they came with bruises and other injuries and suffering from malnutrition.
Alice herself walked to their homes and confronted the family threatening with
police until the bruises stopped. Today, the kids have their daily meal at the
orphanage, for many of them the only one for the day. What started with
porridge is now featuring a daily changing meal of beans/corn, other vegetables
and fruits like potatoes and bananas and once a week rice with meat. This is
why we decided to buy and cook for them a fully-fledged lunch with lots of
meat, rice, veggies, fruits etc. on our last day. We are looking forward to
this! The whole meal for around 90 people costs 200 USD, this is nothing compared
to our country, so again this gives you some different thoughts about how
little really makes a difference over here.
Another impressive story is about the ten widows around the
orphanage which had no other choice then to beg for food and money for their
rent. Glorious started to buy food and supplies from them, enabling them to
earn some money on the side. Glorious is helping them to set up a small business,
buying them a machine to produce slippers, installing it in one of the new
office rooms of the orphanage. Once the business is up and running, the widows
hopefully can afford to rent another shop in town for themselves. This explains
why they so desperately pledged for electric wiring in the new office rooms. We
did not plan this for this trip, but who knows, with some more fundraising in
the UAE, we might make this possible as well…
Every month, Glorious Orphanage Cooperation sends money for the
food and salaries. Food only for one month is around 2 million Tanzanian
Shillings, translating into 1300 USD. A Gucci bag starts at around 2000 USD if
it’s a small one – think!
Funds for the food, salaries, uniforms and school supplies are covered from the annual kids' sponsorship fees. Funds for projects such as building classrooms, playground, water well etc. are raised by the Glorious Orphanage Cooperation team in the US, Canada, Italy and the UAE through private donations or corporate donations such as ours. When we entered the first class room, the
kids very overly excited, greeting properly ‘good morning teacher!’ (since
every volunteer, or white person is seen as a teacher by them) and gave us
their biggest smile – forget about shyness!
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| one of the four new classrooms |
In school, which consist of four newly built class rooms
(funded by various donors including an anonymous donor from the UAE as we learnt later), they
learn English, Swahili, Mathematics as the main subjects and a little bit of
Science and Geography. They have five full-time teachers but a lot of the contribution is done by the Western volunteers that come and go at the
orphanage.
Once school was finished and the kids had a break to wait
for the lunch, we finally had a chance to properly meet them. This was quite an
overwhelming experience, having them running all over the dusty school yard,
playing soccer or just crawling up our laps wanting to be held and cuddled. We
started to follow their orders of ‘teachers push me’ on the metal swing which
was big hit, together with playing the ‘flying planes’ in our arms making them
dizzy and laughing. At one point, we
found ourselves painting stars, hearts, numbers and letters in the sand with
our bare hands, allowing them to show off their skills. Wherever we looked,
they tried to impress us with standing on their hands, shooting the football up
the roof, climbing on the building and jumping from it or simply attacking us
from the back with a sudden cuddle.
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| Yves, Alice, Martina, Zoe, Julius |
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| they are just happy! |
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| Yves with one of the cutest kids ever! |
I had two little girls playing with my hair while I was
cuddling another one, when I went inside to have a sip of water I found a
professional dread lock standing from my head! They are little professionals
over there! Zoe on the other hand was sitting with one of them on her lap in
the class room, eagerly learning how to copy the numbers she was writing for
them! Yves, as the only male and white ‘teacher’ found himself as a father
figure for 81 kids, resolving conflicts and fights, wiping tears and fixing
bruises and got pulled from one corner to the other to play the school yard
police. We had so much fun!
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| zoe playing with the kids |
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| love them! |
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| zoe with the kids |
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| swinging with our little friends |
On the way home, after organizing some millions of Tanzanian Shillings for downpayments, we had another goody - RAIN!!!!!
We are excited about what tomorrow will bring - balloons are apparently in high demand with the kids, we will also bring the blankets which finally arrived this afternoon at the airline's office and so we'll keep you posted on another day in amazing Tanzania.
Great update - love reading the blog and love the photos - you guys make us proud! Cannot believe we made all of this happen with sending emails! Tried to call Yves a number of times last night but no luck! I hope you have another great day ahead - keep the news coming! TVO
ReplyDeleteYou really make us proud!! Go girl - you rock!!! And say hi to the "Tropenhut" ;p
ReplyDelete