13 May 2013

School of Dreams



We named the orphan sponsorship program in Congo "Masomo ya Ndoto" the School of Dreams because orphaned children would tell me their hopes and dreams and then explain that it would never happen because they weren't able to go to school. Many African nations have found ways to provide free primary school education within the past fifteen years. In Congo nothing is free and it's the poor who suffer from it. Orphans are usually the poorest of the poor and ranked at the very bottom of whatever family member happens to take them in. In a world where people are choosing to either put food on the table or pay school fees, no one is paying school fees.

When I lived in Congo I had a desire to help orphans. I was working in an area of Likasi called Shituru and through a series of events found about 100 orphaned children. I was living without electricity or running water and had no means to help all those kids. I remembered the story of Peter and John meeting the lame man at the gate saying they had no money to give but they would give what they had- the gospel. I started a weekly program where the orphans could come and hear the word of God. I used to have the kids memorize scripture and summarize stories. One day five year old Jean Paul explained the story of Elijah and the Ravens like this "God loved Elijah and he saw his hunger so he sent some birds to bring him food. I know that God loves me too and sees me when I am hungry and now I know he will somehow bring me food too."

I bonded with these kids week after week and prayed for some way to do something more tangible to help them. I talked with their guardians and asked what was the one thing they needed help with the most. They almost all answered school fees. I did the calculations and it seemed nearly impossible to raise enough money for all of the kids. I started aiming to just start with grade 1 and then hopefully add from there. School starts in September and by June I had nearly given up. Then in July I had a meeting with some friends who run a Christian school. They said they heard about the orphans and also wanted to help. They told me they would allow the kids to go there at half the normal price and consider the loss they would incur their Christian contribution to the orphans. I still didn't have enough money but all of a sudden it felt doable. That week someone gave me $2000 and before September the project was fully funded and has been ever since.

It is a Christian school and the person I trained in Children's ministry still does the chapel services every Friday. While I was last there I got to do them myself. It was so much fun to see the same kids so excited about the things of God. They came up to me one by one expressing their gratitude for the opportunity to receive an education. Their teachers all sang their praises and explained how much more seriously the orphaned children are about school than their peers.

Being able to visit them was such a blessing to me. I am so thankful to everyone who has given towards the project! The story is such a good reminder to me about how when we step out in faith and give what we can, God will make a way even when it seemed impossible!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Bravo!!!

As Nelson Mandela said-
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world."

as far as I'm concerned, education is the key to unlock the golden door of freedom. Where neither the word "education" is singular, nor does the word "freedom" hold a singular meaning...

continue the good work...

-S