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Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. East Africa |
After navigating my way through dark and narrow
passage ways constantly plagued with murky water in between market shacks, it
was, simply put- impossible for me to ignore the brightest light in Dar Es
Salaam. Maria Steven's eyes, effortlessly cutting through the grime that
results from a mostly unplanned city of (perhaps) five million inhabitants,
were just the beginning of what was to be months of a joyous six year old
always by my side dancing, singing, hugging, climbing or just rolling around
the ground barefoot-always in the same soiled clothes but always with the same
infectious smile. I now know there is no better way to mask suffering and
hopelessness than the face of Maria Steven.
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Behind Mwenge Market, Dar Es Salaam (12/9/12)
*Click to enlarge |
Maria is the child of a single mother who works
under the relentless African sun from dawn to dusk, seven days a week, for a
meager dollar a day in a highly populated area known as Mwenge, not too far
from what they call home next to the Manzese Bridge. Maria has never known her
father and most likely never will. With little supervision and guidance, I've
even found Maria kilometers away from Mwenge collecting bottle caps (only the
red ones) on the side of a road that one would have a better chance of crossing
by closing their eyes, crossing their fingers, and holding their
breath rather than the traditional and usually more effective 'looking
both ways' technique. Still, Maria blissfully continues to dodge bullets and
buses...among other invisible threats. Without access to clean or even running
water (or a bathroom), there is an alarmingly high risk of typhoid, cholera,
and dysentery for Maria...not to mention that handing Maria a toothbrush was
like me handing any six year old a TI-89 Texas Instrument. However, Maria
will absolutely not be able to evade the biggest danger of them all which lurks
only a few months ahead: the life as a woman in Dar Es Salaam without an
education or family support.
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Maria chillin' |
My time in Dar, whether it be at the
University of Dar Es Salaam researching education in Tanzania, roaming the
streets, playing football with local teams, teaching at a high school, or
helping a local business owner run a shop, has only solidified the fact that I
know with absolute certainty that without quality education Maria is severely
vulnerable. To be on the same page, there has been a massive increase in
enrollment of public primary schools in Tanzania during the past decade (from
4,000,000 to around 9,000,000). However, that increase in enrollment has not
been matched by any sort of increase in teachers or learning resources. The average teacher to student ratio
in Dar was an astonishing 54:1 in 2007, and that was six years ago. More
than often, students cannot make it through the first years of secondary school
after primary school and turn to face a life of selling fanta and coca-cola on
the streets (if they're lucky). For the marginalized young women of Dar that
story is fully capable of becoming unfathomably worse. For Maria, even public primary
school seems like a reach- located far from home and without the means to
purchase the required school uniform or shoes, books, pencils and paper, not to
mention the complete and utter absence of a safe, learning environment to
return to after school.
It is imperative that my best little friend starts
Standard One (first grade) at an institution that is capable of preparing her
for an effective high school education. With all the pieces and logistics
already set into place, Maria has the support she needs to attend school at St.
Mary's International School in Dar Es Salaam. She'll be able to put all of her
creative energy and more into a celebration of learning. Who knows where Maria
can go, but I cannot wait to find out.
With your help her story is going to be one that
she already is writing: vibrant and full of life, capable of shifting the
shapes, moods, and the environment around her wherever she goes. Remember, by
providing an education to someone who is more than deserving, we will not only
be helping an individual, but the entire community to which that individual
belongs to! The only thing Maria, Mwenge, and Tanzania needs now- is you! Sooo,
this Christmas I ask all my friends, family, and able givers (Santa too, of
course) to send Maria to school. ANY CONTRIBUTION helps.