In my last
blog I mentioned child sponsorship. So what’s my experience of child sponsorship?
And what does Global Care child sponsorship look like?
We’ve
sponsored children with Global Care for over 25 years. We started sponsoring one girl, *Rachel, when
she and our youngest son were both 7. They met each other in 2008 during a
Volunteer trip to Uganda, when they were both 17. We met Rachel again when we visited Rukungiri
in 2013. She’s married with a daughter
and running a business selling grain. A real love has developed between my
family and this Ugandan ‘daughter’ but we are truly humbled by the intense gratitude
she shows us.At the camp we saw two children sponsored by family and church friends.
We met *Arnold when he was about 5. His father had recently been killed over a land dispute and his mother was struggling to look after her children on her own. When we met him, we were shown his school bag which contained half an exercise book, a pencil stub, a razor blade to sharpen the pencil and a slice of potato for his lunch. Arnold is now a healthy teenager – he looked happy and well and it was great to see him enjoying playing football with his friends like any boy his age.
We also met
*Babra, a shy 11 year old who was abandoned at birth on a neighbour’s porch and
has suffered physical and emotional abuse.
She’s only in Primary 2 and struggles academically. The family who took her in have suffered
financially with the long dry season this year which has led to loss of income
and consequently poor nutrition for the family. However, she attends school
fairly regularly and gets a midday meal at school. As the week went on she came
out of her shell and by the end of camp she was smiling and laughing with her
friends and joining in with games and singing. We are reassured to know that David, the Global
care local children’s worker, watches out for the children. He knows if they
haven’t been at school or if there are family troubles. He knows every child by name. He makes sure they’re fed and if they’re ill that
they have medical attention. Our Babra
was not so shy with David!
We’ve had
the tremendous privilege of meeting some of our sponsored children, and watching
them grow and mature. In Rachel, we’ve see the outcome of having support for
education and access to health services. Several of the Global Care Ugandan staff were
sponsored children themselves and speak very highly of the scheme and opportunities
it gave them. Having received so much
they want to give back to the next generation of vulnerable children.
The camp
provided an opportunity for sponsored children to have a week of ‘being
children’. Away from the pressures and battles of subsistence living, of fighting
for survival against the elements, struggling to endure in extreme poverty or with
disability and disease, these children were able to simply have fun.
of themselves, enjoyed performing songs and drama, chuckled
at the antics of the Mzungus (white people), played on the playground, and
raced each other amid giggles and happy screeching.
Our team saw
sponsorship working in schools partnerships where schools buy land and provide
the whole school with food for midday meals. Where new latrines have been built
to improve sanitation and encourage girls to attend schools. Where building huts
to accommodate staff encourages teachers to work at rural schools. We’ve seen Global Care partnerships with local
communities including projects as diverse as digging wells and providing
protected springs, providing HIV counselling and testing, supporting the
development of school buildings, and working with volunteer community health
workers.
I am unashamedly
promoting the work of Global Care because I not only have faith that it works,
but I trust the people on the ground in Uganda and the team in the UK. Every
time I visit Uganda (this was my fifth trip) I see something that involves a
member of the local staff in sacrificially giving of their time – wanting above
all to serve the children who they see as their responsibility. Every time I go, I see more evidence of an organisation
working to provide support for sustainable projects and enabling local
communities to learn new skills or become self-sufficient. We read so much negative press about NGOs in
Africa, I want to shout for my Ugandan friends who clearly demonstrate that
Global Care is good news for the projects it supports.
For more
information on child sponsorship please visit: http://www.globalcare.org.uk/sponsor
*Names
changed to protect identity
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