On Saturday morning, Anne Marie Giangiulio,
regional grants officer for the Rotary International Foundation, and Rotarians
who work on grants, gave presentations on the new grants programs and how to
apply for grants. One of the presenters
was our tour leader, Past District Governor, Brad Howard.
This was Brad’s 18th trip to West
Africa. Brad, who is president of Howard Tours, is and exceptional Rotarian and
leader. Sunday was devoted to visiting
the approximately 36 booths from clubs throughout West Africa that are seeking
international partners to fund projects.
The clubs were from Nigeria, Togo, Liberia, and Ghana. I was lucky to have a smart, articulate, talented and very beautiful Nigerian Rotarian, Oyindamola Opadiran, as my dinner companion. After the dinner, we went downstairs to the bar and sang songs at the piano. She is a much better singer than I, but my voice lessons are resulting in some improvement in my singing (I think).
David giving polio vaccine |
Vaccine carried in ice chest |
The mothers were all cooperative and it is not a difficult task, except some of the children were frightened by the big white man, and cried and screamed. Others enjoyed being held. It was an extremely rewarding experience to administer the drops. Many of the children suffer from various illnesses, often related to lack of clean water and any waste disposal system.
Do I have to? |
Health woker and lova Rotarian |
On Tuesday morning we took a 2 1/2 hour bus ride
to a rural village in the central plains at which the Rotary Club of Fort
Wayne, Indiana, had completed two new classroom and a playground. The children were very happy to see our group
of Rotarians from North America. Although
just one of our group is a member of the club that sponsored the projects, the
students saw us as representing all the Rotarians who built their new classrooms. There were new desks in the classrooms that
had to be removed every night to prevent them from being stolen. Our group “passed the hat” and collected $1,800
to install doors and locks in the classrooms. We stopped at a small village for
lunch and enjoyed an excellent meal under the trees. Tuesday night we went to a
restaurant in town for our last dinner together.
Wednesday morning we left the hotel early for a 2
hour bus ride to visit another school and village, and craft center. The school
had three traditional thatched roof classrooms with no walls and two new built
with donations from the European Union. When I sat down at a desk in the
thatched roof classroom, the children piled onto my lap and back.
We walked through the village and stopped to
watch a weaver. The prices were very low
and most of us bought at least one woven scarf.
We rode another hour into the foothills to the to the town of Kpalime,
which has a trade school for craftsman making pottery, wood carvings, jewelry,
and batik. I could not resist buying an
African drum for $20.
We stopped for lunch on the way back to the
hotel, where I went for a swim in the pool, before going out to a farewell
reception in the hotel. At 7 p.m. we
boarded the bus for the ride to the airport and the long flights home.
The strongest impressions I have of this
experience are the hundreds of laughing, chanting, singing children greeting us
with such joy at each school we visited; the school children climbing on my lap and
back and clinging to me; and the faces of the children to whom I gave the polio
vaccine. Rotary has, and will continue
to make a difference in the lives of these children. And they have made a difference in my life.
I just corrected the spelling of Oyindanola Opadiran's name. Sorry for the mistake!
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