The kids at Achungo are amazing. While I was there, I scribbled some thoughts and impressions of them in a notebook. Words like "happy ", "joyful", "sweet-natured", and "unselfish" kept popping up in my musings. They were such good kids who didn't have a complaint on their lips, despite living lives of poverty and being completely lacking in resources. Kids in America would do well to take note. Here's an example of how amazing the Achungo kids are...
I'm sitting in the back of a classroom watching Mr. Vincent teach history to a group of 9-year-olds. The material is dense, and covers former leaders of Kenya and their attributes and contributions. It is being taught lecture style, and the kids are all taking notes in their tattered notebooks like they are in college. I've never seen 9-year-olds (3rd grade aged kids) take notes like this. The class is quiet and well-behaved, focused on the teacher. Classroom management is not an issue at Achungo like it is in the States. Suddenly, I see a boy throw his pen across the room at another boy. It's the first time I've seen any form of misbehavior in a classroom since I've been here. I'm surprised Mr. Vincent doesn't say anything since I'm sure he saw the pen fly across the room. The boy who was hit with the pen scoops it up, scribbles with it in his notebook for a few seconds, and then throws it back across the aisle. It lands next to a girl sitting on the other side of the classroom, and she picks it up. She writes with it for a minute, then throws it at another student who is sitting next to me. He grabs the pen, and begins to write with it too. It suddenly dawns on me that these kids aren't throwing the pen at each other, but rather to each other. They are sharing it. And then I see that it is a red pen, and the boy who is writing with it is using it to highlight his notes. After a minute of improving his notes, he throws it to a boy on the other side of the room who I now notice has subtly held his hand out for it. This pen, this red pen is the only colored pen in the room. And the kids are sharing it so they can all take better notes.
The kids at Achungo are amazing. And those of us who live in America with all our red pens and fancy things and wealth of resources could really learn a lot from these orphans in rural Kenya. I know I did.
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
The October Trip to Achungo
The team that journeyed to Achungo in October 2012 was a mixed team of 9 that included 2 returnees: Jennifer Lin and Madeline Cowden. Madeline and 4 others (John and Joyce De Russy, Beverly Boyd and Cathie Grace) were an "advance team" of 5 that left 2 days early, on October 22 to spend 2 days recuperating in Nairobi and touring a bit as they waited for the rest of us. The rest of us, Jennifer, Monte, Lizzy Burhenne and Sarah Ackerly, departed Wednesday, October 24. Finally, we were all together at the Gracia Gardens Hotel, Nairobi, on Friday morning, 25th and we began our adventure. As with prior trips, our first 2 days were in the Masai Mara Game Reserve, staying at a safari hotel and making trips into the wild to see the most wild of all animals! Then Sunday we ventured forth to Rodi Kopany village and the Tausi Hotel and entered into a full week with the children and staff of Achungo Children's Center.
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