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Flies, in search of moisture, settled on their
perspiring heads, infected eyes and cracked lips. I was in the
Children's Nutrition Center in Monze, Zambia and these children
were diseased. Each suffered the swollen joints and crusted
skin of malnutrition and were admitted in a final, desperate
attempt to save them from starving to death. Their mothers held
them closely, each woman wearing the African sarong, two yards
of patterned cotton wrapped around the torso, descending downwards
to leathery ankles, bare callused feet and ugly spread toes.
This was my first trip to Africa. I am one of
those people that carries a vague list in my mind of ambitions,
passions and dreams, all deferred to some indefinite time and
mentally filed under "one day I'll...". This visit to my missionary
aunt in Zambia was on that list, along with traveling down the
Amazon, running a marathon, and learning the tango in Argentina.
I arrived in Monze for three weeks with grand illusions of helping,
teaching, and making a difference.
The children at the nutrition center who leave
will be temporarily nourished, hydrated and vaccinated. No more
than one third of them will survive another year. Their mothers
will be given bags of maize seeds to grow food. The tragic truth
is that half the seeds will not cultivate in the drought conditions
of their home villages. Thereafter, half the crop will be stolen
before ripening. Whatever remains will be converted into the
monotonous corn gruel that is the tasteless staple of the local
diet. This is the cycle of despair that is Africa.
The mystique of Africa is utterly depressing at
ground level, where statistics become people. Small bloated
bellies become young personalities with smiles and affection
to share. In these parts, the poorest of the poor expire anonymously
and with alarming frequency. The startling bleakness of local
reality left me feeling like I had little to contribute. My
carefully cultivated white-collar keyboard skills were hopelessly
optimistic and utterly useless here. Throughout my first week,
I struggled for an adequate response to the plight that surrounded
me. If only I could do something, but what? Give money? Labor?
Time?
In my second week, suddenly inspired, I returned
to the nutrition center on my own personal mission. A nurse
provided the inspiration, telling me that "All many of these
women have left is hope for their children and the fading memories
of them when they are gone." The one local merchant that served
as a gas station, food shop, butcher, photo processor, tailor
and agricultural supply depot supplied the logistical assistance.
This was it! Insight and a path forward instantaneously united.
Back I went again, during my final week, to gather
the group of mothers and children one last time in the communal
kitchen. Shielded from the sun by a large, thatched, sloping
roof, we clustered around the raised cooking fire. The humidity,
the smoldering charcoal, the tangy body odor, the flies, and
the stench of previous meals all intermingled here.
I moved quickly back and forth, pausing, choosing
and presenting my gift to each mother. Some looked puzzled,
but two had immediately recognized what they were holding. The
kitchen suddenly filled with scattered flies and excited chatter.
The energized mothers shrieked at each other and their gifts,
startling the children from their diseased slumbers. Each cradled
her gift carefully, comparing without jealousy. Everyone obviously
pleased with their own while inspecting each other's with genuine
admiration.
So many travelers take pictures while so few take
the time to give them. That was my gift. I offered photographs
to each mother with child, to sustain and share their memories
back at their villages.
Paradoxically, it may be I who will never forget
them. I vividly recall the arranging of hair, straightening
of sarongs, and finally the approval by others as each woman
prepared for her portrait. All this was quickly followed in
sequence by straightening of shoulders and pride of expression
as the shutter clicked. Stripped away in those moments were
all my preconceptions of the abject poor, replaced by the realization
that dignity is not absent in poverty, just trapped beneath
its hard surface.
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