Friday 17 July 2015

The Stars of Sandema

The Stars of Sandema

During our stay here of approximately 4 weeks, we have seen many stars. By that we are inferring to both the giant hot balls of gases you see on the ceiling of the night sky and the great people that make up this city. Sandema is a small village that inhabits many good people and souls who labour day and night to earn their daily bread.

Being avid travellers, we have learnt that a great city is not made up of the quality of tourist attractions but rather the people that live in it. The amount of joy and love the people show to one another is ethereal to look at. As a team our core aim is to integrate and raise awareness for the disabled people in the district to ensure they are acknowledged as important citizens.

We hope to achieve these goals through the inclusion of children living with disabilities into sporting activities in schools, by raising the awareness level of people as to how to care for disabled people through sensitisations programmes and by ICT workshops. All in all the prospect of the project is in goods hands and we are all in awe about kick starting the project and despite the fact it is our fourth week in this community, everyday feels like our first.

Through some of the people that we have met here, we have been inspired to make more of an effort to help others.  One of these people is Charles, a blind man who makes a living by weaving. We met him through a meeting we had with the local DPOs and couldn’t take my eyes off at what he was doing.


Even for a person with full vision, weaving is not easy to learn and takes time to master. Now take a blind man, it becomes more of a challenge to learn the skill yet this man does it wherever he is so that he can make a living for his family. This has taught us that no matter what your limitations are you can do anything. With practice; you can overcome any limitation and do the seemingly impossible!

Another person who we have met with is Yaw. He invited Team LIFE to view his kindergarten that he runs, for young children, in a rural village where access to education for the local youngsters was non-existent! What struck us even more is his answer when one of us asked him why does he do what he does. His response was ‘I want these young children to develop a strong foundation in reading as I believe in order to progress to higher education one must be proficient in understanding what they are reading and through my kindergarten I hope to see these young bucks become masters of reading’.

 Despite having a disability, Yaws’ actions are having and will continue to have big impact on his community. Through this, we see that we all should have some sort of responsibility of further bettering our community and no matter your limitations, every one can make a positive impact, be it small or big.


Through meeting these people we have seen that no matter how mountainous a challenge may seem if you want to do it then you can, if you put your mind to it and persevere. In the future we hope to capture many more valuable accounts of people over the upcoming weeks and put them on paper. One way we wish to achieve this is by starting a ‘Humans of Sandema’ project whereby a picture of a person is taken and we note down a life experience of there’s from which people can take inspiration. Without further ado, we believe that the title at first may have been deceiving so it only makes sense that this blog ends with a picture of the stars that was captured on a night not too long ago from today.


Friday 10 July 2015

Girl Child





Girl Child
“A girl should be two things: who and what she wants”
Coco Chanel

When you think of a woman, what are the words that come to your mind?
Elegance, beauty, class, modesty or maybe a hardcore feminist?  
                                 
Now I would like to put you in the lives of an African woman nay a Ghanaian woman, what springs to mind? I will save you from pondering on the thought and tell you about the life of many women here in Ghana.

A woman is not always treated as who she wants to be and in many cases is deprived of her rights to go to school, speak when men speak and the saddest being the treatment of widows after the death of their husbands.  What usually comes after the death of her husband is an accusation of murder and what follows can be described as being one of the most horrific things i have heard.  The woman is sometimes made to sleep beside his lifeless body on the same bed, walk bare footed around the community, shave her head completely, and when the body of her husband is washed she is made to drink the water. This is done with the mindset that if she has killed her husband she will also die. She goes through a lot; many become depressed and sometimes even die from this process not because they committed murder. I would like to clarify this does not happen to all widows in Ghana but to large enough number that it requires a mention.

The gender inequalities do not stop there but extend to the education of the girl children in Ghana with a proportionally higher number of boys being sent to school than girls.  This is most likely because of the traditional roles men and women take in Ghanaian society, with girls taking a domestic role in the home. Prior to school, the girl child is expected to sweep the house, mop the floor and perform many domestic chores. The consequences of this is that she has to wake up earlier than her brothers at home which would mean that she is considerably more tired during the day or does not even get a chance to go to school.

As part of the “Life project” we hold a girls club in Wiaga, a more rural setting compared to Sandema. The first time we visited the girls club we were astounded by the sheer amount of girls who had come to take part in the club. Initially the first game we played was to get the girls to introduce themselves to each other and ourselves, but it also got us to hear their ambitions.  The most common ambition we heard was “I want to be a medical doctor” followed quickly by a round of applause. It was awe inspiring hearing the level of support they had for each other, but one has to wonder will they get this opportunity. We took the opportunity to ask the girls what they wanted to learn and we got personal hygiene, child labour and human rights. Although we hoped to get more topics from the girls it was our first time meeting and we would consider it a very successful one.           

Overall we are looking forward to our future girls clubs, not because we think in the short time we have we can entirely change the life of the girl child of Wiaga but because we believe that we can make some difference to it.
                                                                                             Nyasha UKV & Godiva ICV

We would like to give a gracious thank you to all the women in the world, as we know that wherever you are in this world you have faced inequality because of your gender. Therefore I would like to reiterate Hillary Clinton’s words in 1998 “Women’s rights are Human rights”.