Thursday, December 27, 2007

Inspiration

Sometimes true inspiration comes from the most unlikely places unexpectedly.

I just received an email from a former student of mine who I have recently asked to teacher a beginner class in my adult education program. He is a Darfurian who seeks to learn as much from life as possible.

My prayer are that I snould give you truth .beaty, Money .Love and Joy.Be you as the stone. stand up to the assailants,overcome your aggressors and remaber one crowded hour of glorious life is worth an age without a name,dear Bobbie If u not mind I hope we are close friend so dont feel that out of sight ,out of mind am never forget my friend
please accept my great respect
Friendly yours
Mohamed Hussein Mohamed




Hometown Heroes

Pem. Twp. students raise $850 for refugees


By JASON HARRIS
Burlington County Times

PEMBERTON TOWNSHIP — When she graduated from high school here in 2004, Bobbie Downs wanted to become a lawyer. She said she never expected to find herself living in Cairo and teaching English to refugees from one the world's worst humanitarian crises.

Downs is back from Egypt for Christmas. She was at Pemberton Township High School yesterday to talk to students about her work with a school operated by Gugu Community Development and Building Association in Cairo and pick up a check for $850.

Students from the group Second Chance for Darfur's Kids raised the money by printing a program for a faculty basketball game and selling advertisements to local businesses.

Downs said the money would go toward teacher salaries at the school. “The teachers haven't been paid in 42 months,” she said.

Downs said Drew University, where she majored in political science, has a strong program for sending its students overseas. When she decided after graduation to take a year off before going to law school, she volunteered to work with Refugee Egypt.

She enjoyed her time in Africa so much, she volunteered to go back and work with Gugu.

“It sounds really funny, but it has a good meaning in Arabic,” she said.

“Gugu,” she said, means the place where treasure is kept.

She works with Sudanese, Eritreans, Ethiopians and Somalis. Most are refugees escaping the fighting in South Sudan and Darfur. There are programs for children and she's helped establish two schools for adults. The refugees who have re-established themselves in Egypt help others who have fled the violence.

Downs said Gugu is now looking to add an after-school sports program.


“The kids have nowhere to play,” she said. “We're trying to raise money to build a playground.”

While Downs was working in Egypt last summer, high school English teacher Terry Hagen read an article about her efforts with Gugu.

“All of a sudden, a light went on,” Hagen said.

Teachers here are responsible for organizing a service project each year. Hagen, the widow of a Cameroonian citizen and a former Peace Corps volunteer, said she'd been trying unsuccessfully to get her co-workers to take on a project that would benefit Africans.

When she read about Downs, she knew she'd found a way to connect the continent to the township.

“It wasn't just about Africa anymore,” she said. “We had a connection to Pemberton Township.”

Hagen called Terri Sharp, a fellow teacher and an advisor for the Future Business Leaders of America club at the high school. They suggested raising money for Gugu to the club and students voted to take on the project.

The Future Business Leaders of America, along with members of the National Honor Society and DECA-Marketing Students of Cooperative Education club, formed Second Chance for Darfur's Kids.

The group plans to continue fundraising for Gugu. They've already collected and shipped soccer uniforms and they're hoping to raise enough money to send laptop computers to the school.

“We're going to raise money until she leaves Egypt,” said Future Business Leaders of America club President Megan Writenour.


* The article misquoted the number of months the teachers have not received a salary- it should read " 2 months" instead of "42 months."

How I Entertain




Entertaining angels is a constant occurrence. Every person that comes into our lives needs to feel our love. This is how I show mine.

For anyone who wonders, this is what I have done and will be doing...
  • teaching 2nd and 3rd grade English and religion
  • children's after school programs
  • adult English schools -teacher and administrator
  • children's music program
  • organizing a children's sports program
  • fundraising
  • Bible studies
  • youth outreach
  • relationship building

*I am currently enjoying time at home in New Jersey after 3 months in Cairo, but I will be returning to Egypt on January 8th and my work will continue.*

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Educate yourself...



Understanding the when, why, where, who, and how of the Sudanese refugee situation in Cairo is difficult. This video is a strong beginning. While it can't explain and show everything, I recommend it for anyone who might want to understand a little bit of the history and larger context of what I do everyday.

Entertaining the community...


The Gugu Community Development and Building Association Mission Statement:

The Gugu Community Development and Building Association (GCDBA) is a grassroots community association run by refugees for refugees that seeks to provide and enrich education for refugee children, eradicate childhood illiteracy, and improve adult education, women’s activities and cultural events for refugees.

GCDBA is located within Hadayek el Maadi, a poor area in the district of Maadi. The town of Maadi (about 30 minutes outside of Cairo) has a population of approximately 4,000 Sudanese refugees. From these 4,000, about 45% are children from 1 to 17 years old. GCDBA focuses its services on this population, but seeks to work together with other organizations to serve those in areas with high concentrations of refugees, such as Arba wa Nus, Maadi, and Ain Shams.

Gugu serves a community of an estimated 190 direct beneficiaries, made up of many who have not been interviewed or have been rejected by UNHCR and therefore have no access to their humanitarian and other services. Beneficiaries are asylum seekers mainly from South Sudan and Darfur, but also include those from Somalia, Eritrea and Ethiopia.

In our community, there are few affordable educational alternatives, so we place great importance on serving as many refugee children as possible. Without the GuGu Learning Center, many refugee children would grow up without ever attending school. This is the main reason that the founding members were interested in creating a school—to give children a chance at a better future and way of life. Our primary school currently provides education to 106 children in levels 1 through 5, divided among a morning and an afternoon shift. The kindergarten program serves 40 lovable kids. Our teachers come from many different African cultures, but the majority of our teachers are Sudanese refugees and the staff is supplemented by volunteers mainly from the United States. We are also hoping to establish a children’s sports program that will provide a place for children to play while giving them an opportunity to exercise and eat nutritional snacks regularly

The Gugu Adult Program provides services to refugee adults and youth in the area. We currently provide computer training classes to members of the community. GCDBA also coordinates vocational training through Coptic Evangelical Organization for Social Services (CEOSS). The Adult Education Program is in its foundational stages, providing English training to youth and adults in three different levels, including an advanced level program that also instructs students in mathematics, social studies, and science.

I currently have been focusing my activities around the services of Gugu. I have been teaching several subjects and grades at the learning center and also placing much energy into restoring the adult education program. Gugu is only the beginning...

Entertaining Angels

Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some people have entertained angels without knowing it.
~ Hebrews 13:2


Life is full of strangers. Everyone is a stranger at some point.

For the past few months, I have been in constant contact with strangers. More importantly, I've been "the stranger" in most circumstances. It's obvious that I arrived as a foreigner in Cairo and that I remain a stranger in many ways everyday. Yet, somehow being a stranger has become so "normal" now.

This blog is going to be about strangers. Who knows- you may be reading this and I am a stranger to you. You will read this and the people I write about will be strangers to you. They were once strangers to me too. Some of them will remain as unfamiliar characters, but many will unfold as loving friends and invaluable people in my life. I've been entertaining them and they've been entertaining me.

Let's try to change that. Let's break down the walls that make all of us strangers to each other. Welcome to the life of this stranger- an American girl, fresh out of college, living in Cairo, Egypt serving Sudanese refugees

This is the start of my story. The story of entertaining angels.