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7.23.2012

Week 1


Sunday, 5 AM.

I’m sitting in the back of a 4-wheel drive Toyota watching the hills reveal the landscape of Rwanda to me.  As I look out the partially open window we pass green banana trees, a pseudo palm tree for Africa; rolling hills, each with different trails walked on them; lakes, looking as refreshing as you can imagine; and people.  We pass so many people.  People walking over hills to church, people walking to get water from the lakes, and people carting bananas on their bikes to go to market.  Just people.

As I pass each individual I think about how each has a story and how every story is worth hearing, but so few get the chance to have it be told.  How is that fair?  How do we pick and choose the stories we tell to others?  What makes a tale worth telling? 

We pass 5 children under the age of 4 and they run to the edge of the road to wave to us.  Muzungus or white travelers are superstars here.  All of the children want the chance to wave and smile at us.  They want to know why we are here, but do we want to know why they are?

The jeep in front of us throws a half empty water bottle out of the window for a child.  How do you choose which child needs water more? 

I have gotten the amazing opportunity, two times now, to struggle with these thoughts.  They bare weight on my mind and are hard to express, but if that’s what it takes to try to reach out to a few than I can handle it.  For now at least…

Perhaps I should back up.

This was, in brief, my week.

Monday was orientation for our first Hope Shines 2012 camp.  Orientation means that all of the volunteers and translators meet and go over the curriculum for the camps that year.  It would never be that easy though.

Due to an airline issue, Stephanie Chu, who is running the camps this year did not land in Kigali, Rwanda until Midnight on Sunday.  I picked her up and we got home around 1:30 AM to unload her 7 bags and get her to bed.  I was also on day 2 of a cold and wasn’t feeling my best, but also acknowledged it could be worse.  I could have HIV.

It was so nice to get to see all of the translators from last year again.  Pam, Josiane, Diane, and Bienvenu greeted me with open arms and as we sat to do introductions you could feel the excitement in the air. 

3 hours later, and much less enthusiastic, we had gone over the entire curriculum with a fine-toothed comb!  As we took a break, we made plans to get the new volunteers to the genocide memorial and the rest of us to make sandwiches for the first day of camp.  Even though sandwich making was not so exciting I knew that after sandwiches we would get to meet the kids.

Brown dust, mud homes, water ditches, mopeds, and music.  Driving to the school my stomach was in knots.  I didn’t know how the kids would react to seeing Stephanie and myself, and it was killing me.

As we pulled up to the school I could see all of the children, my children.  I popped out of the car and ran over the group ready to have them charge me, but they didn’t.

CSC, the Child Support Center, reaches out to children that have one parent or legal guardian technically making them an orphan by definition in Rwanda.  Due to this fact, I had forgotten that the CSC children were by far much more guarded, as they are in the ‘real’ world everyday.  The comparison being, SINAPISI children live in an orphanage and so they are more willing to take chances, as all of the children are their support system. 

As I went around the circle and started giving them each a hug I could recall their faces and names as if it was yesterday that I had left them.  After all the hugs were distributed, Stephanie and I spoke about camp and how excited we were to get to see them again this year.  Slowly, but surely the kids got more excited over the Hope Shines camp for the year 2012. 

It was in this moment that I knew that camps were happening and that all of my preparations were well worth their while.

Camp was amazing.  There is not much more to say about the matter.

We colored, grew plants, read Eric Carle books, played jacks, learned about producers and consumers, made recipes, played soccer, did math games, sewed bags and maxi-pads, danced, laughed, had fun, and much more.  The kids were awesome, the volunteers were awesome, and overall camp was amazing.

I am very lucky that I get to see all of these kids again in the days to come.  The last day of camp is usually very emotional as you are saying goodbye to the kids, but I do not have to.  Day 5 of camp, Saturday, consisted of me reminding them about medical examinations and that I would be there.

I am very lucky.  Saying goodbye is always the hardest part.

It’s 8 AM on Sunday morning.

I’m in Akagera National Park for a safari for the day.  Even though seeing the wildlife is always very interesting, nothing will ever beat seeing those kids smile at camp.  The personal connections you make with the people are most important.  How can you learn about a culture without any personal connections?  The people are what shape the country, the experience, and the future.

Hopefully this first week had an impact on someone here and they can become the people I want to meet on my travels. 

Sustainability is the goal and Hope Shines is doing so much for these kids.  Not only does it bring the children together, but it cultivates creative, fosters imagination, feeds their tummies, and pushes them to think more and try harder.

So how do I choose what stories?  I don’t.  I do my best to remember them all and share them with whom ever wants to hear them. 

Can you listen?

With Care,
Chelsea