All posts by no14plusminus

Our Clinic. Restocking Medicines

Do you know what was one of the best days of my life? The day when we inaugurated HOCT Clinic. A small hospital of our own, functioning in our community. Each month, we restock the medicines and we save as many lives as possible.
We have two medics: a general medicine doctor and an orthopaedist. Very proud of the team.
I dream to one day add a small operating room and a child-delivery ward, for women to come and give birth in sanitary conditions. But all in due time.
For now, look at those beautiful pictures and be happy that many children will receive quality medical assistance. The supplies were bought with the help of all the good people who paid a medical insurance for their children, as well as through small general donations.

 

 

 

 

With love,

Veronica Anghelescu

Progress of Our Work

It is a long Thursday at Help One Child Thrive. We are working with good energy to distribute the food that was donated to the children. We have also received an emergency case of a girl who has not eaten in a few days. Funds have been collected for her and she will receive her food tomorrow.

Reality: As Is. A Study on Life in Low-Class Uganda

In Uganda, life is brutal, unless you are rich. The people I know, they are not rich. The people I know and I serve are very poor: malnourished children, orphans, old grandparents caring after one, two or more nephews and nieces after their own parents died. They are suffering from the most unimaginable diseases, they are dirty, hungry, they have nowhere to sleep, their wounds covered in dirt and puss.

Apart from helping these people through the generous help of the army of voluntaries and good people all around me, I take time to observe, to study them and to learn from them – to better understand their culture. We are so different and yet, all of us… we are just people.

What does it mean to live in those far-away villages? Very often, living = struggling to stay alive. It means finding water do drink, finding something to eat, finding a place to sleep.

Shelter. The third one is apparently… simple. Older people easily shelter children, even if they cannot feed them. Or you just cuddle on to the porch of some house, or wherever you can find a covered shelter to protect yourself from the rain that falls often. What you cannot protect yourself from, is the danger of the mosquitoes, the bite of which can cause malaria, and death. Is it really simple? Unless you are inside, carefully covered in a solid, good-quality mosquito net, if you sleep under the stars, you risk being dead in about two weeks.

How are the houses? Most of them are bad and very bad. Still, they are their homes, and even though they do not compute to our minds, as one would say… they are better than nothing. Inside, they have their banana fibre mat and mosquito nets – and, at least for the night, they are somewhat safe.

What about the first one and second one? Those are hard.

Water. You can drink water from mostly anywhere, but that water is unsafe. People take water in 20L plastic jerrycans (in which, once, there was oil) from the lake, from certain streams, from the boreholes – the safest solutions, but which are not free. You could say – yes, but why don’t people make more boreholes? Basically, because it is very expensive to make one ($4000-$8000), for a borehole going as deep as 25m (85 ft) – and it has to be executed by a professional.

Apart from that, you need to own the land on which the drill is executed, as one cannot go about drilling on public ground. Usually, children are those who are being sent to fetch water. Have you ever observed the arms of the children, in the numerous pictures I post? They have well-defined muscles, they are strong and apt at lifting weights which might be difficult for you, a fit, healthy adult. Children weighing barely 20 kg can carry two jerrycans, 20 L each, from the water-pump to their homes, because… well because there is no other choice.

And then again, there is the sad case of children who linger around the water-source, asking you if they can carry your jerrycan, for some coins – that is their daily sustenance, IF they are lucky. And yes, that is cruel, that is child-labour, but it is how life unfolds there: no mercy.

But is this water good to drink? Yes and no. The deeper the borehole, the safer the water. But if you procure it from a lake (and I have seen it happen) or if the water-source is contaminated, your life is, once again, in danger.

What about bottled water? It exists, and it is considered a luxury. In my own country, the kitchen-sink faucet water is good to drink. Let us ponder over this, and if our souls ache, it is for good reasons: we have become aware that we live in pure luxury.

Food. What do people eat? The food itself is not expensive – the equivalent of what you spend on one Saturday morning at the supermarket is enough to cover food for a month over there. It is THAT cheap, and yet many people cannot afford anything, because they have no income, no source of funds. Those who have a small vegetable garden are fortunate; they can sell some of it, they can eat what they grow, they can make do, but those are not many.

We buy maize flour, rice, beans, matooke (bananas for cooking), fruit like pineapple, bananas, oranges or mango, eggs, cow meat when we can. The problem with the cow meat (or any other form of meat) is that it needs to be cooked and eaten fast, as people do not possess refrigerators (or electricity for that matter).

One of the main foods is posho – maize flour cooked with water until it reaches a dough-like consistency. It accompanies nearly anything, or it can be served with a sauce made of a few beans, or meat, or veggies (in lucky cases). In orphanages, the main food is posho with beans, each day, the same thing over and over again… still, no one complains, because eating something is a real treasure that needs to be valued, even if that treasure does not change for days or even years.

Do they use forks, plates and the usual tools? Children eat with their hands until late in their childhood. Rarely have I seen someone use a fork – they are unessential tools. In a way, they do not own anything that is not strictly essential to survival, be it even a simple knife to portion the posho.

But what about people who have nothing to eat? How do they survive?

They don’t.

Veronica Anghelescu

Humanitarian Worker, Ethnologist

Medical Case – Completed

A while ago, two of our children came to us to advise they have been experiencing eye problems. The younger gil, Shakira Favour, has a dot on her eye which can be anything from a foreign object to a discoloration or even a tumour. The boy had his eyes teary and irritated, and the vision blurry.

After Veronica has fundraised a small amount necessary for the trip and treatment, the children were taken by Mugoya to the eye-hospital in Tororo, where both children were admitted for further investigation.

It turned out that Wickliffe had a piece of glass stuck in his eye, which was carefully removed. It is not eyt clear what Shakira had, but she received treatment and we will see progress of her situation in two weeks time.

Finally, both children received a very tasty lunch and returned home. We are waiting to see progress and results of the treatment received, and they have already advised that they are feeling better.

It was a very good day in our activity and we would like to thank all the good friends that made this intervention possible.

Please consider donating to help one of our children! You will see the results right here.

With love and gratitude,

Veronica and Mugoya

Beautiful Story Time

These good people received help today, thanks to other good people that saw their pain and did not close their eyes. Those are normally very hardworking people but in a moment where lockdown restricts almost all movement, what to work? Where?
Those are people who have small children at home, families, old parents and elders. We were able to offer them maize, rice and soap, to maintain hygiene during those very hard times of disease.
Oxana, Graziabelle, Nina, Claire, Yasmin, Leontina, Claire, Maronia, Janica, Louise, Lucienne, Grace, Krystle – and if I forgot someone, I am sorry (too tired) – thank you for all your love.
There are days like these, cases like these, that reach conclusion in a beautiful and wholesome way – there are people that show us the best side of humanity – and this is what makes my work… worth all the effort.
Special thanks to the onsite team and my ever hardworking colleague, Mugoya.