On
the outskirts of Nairobi, Kenya's capital city, there is a small school nestled
between a busy railroad track and the Sinai Paradise slum. Its corrugated
iron walls are painted purple and white, its dusty courtyard is full of rocks
and there isn't a speck of grass or a leafy tree in sight. Little voices singing
nursery rhymes float out of some classrooms but others are perfectly quiet,
although I knew they were packed full of tiny bodies. I opened the creaky
wooden door to one of these modest classrooms and was hit with an explosion
of excited faces gesturing wildly,
while learning and communicating in their own special silent way.
In 2003, a teacher named Beatrice Anunda founded The Humble Hearts School
for the Deaf. I stumbled upon it by chance, while researching non-profit organizations
on the web, before a backpacking trip in 2006. I was immediately enthralled
by this school and set out to document it during my trip. I was curious to
learn how the hearing impaired survived in a country, which was rampant with
problems, and I wanted to find out what sort of futures were in store for
these disabled kids. I discovered that despite the many challenges the children
were faced with everyday, they also had a sense of hope because of the positive
attitudes imparted by their teachers.
Starting a school like this was not easy for Beatrice. "There is a mentality
in African culture that believes deaf children are cursed," Anunda explained.
Families often hide their deaf children and do not believe they are capable
of becoming independent, educated people. Beatrice had to aggressively seek
out the deaf children living in Nairobi's slums and convince their parents
or guardians that deaf children were worthy of an education, and that they
could learn just like everybody else and become active members of society.
The school started out in a one-room shack with only three students. As a
result of Beatrice's intense effort to
communicate with families in the slum community, and by establishing
one of her deaf teachers as a familiar face there, she gained acceptance for
the school and it grew rapidly. At the time of my visit they had 40 deaf and
130 hearing students in a 7-classroom building.
The children who attend Humble Hearts School for the Deaf are all extremely
poor. Many of them are orphans, and some were not born deaf but lost
their hearing at very young ages due to complications from diseases,
such as malaria and meningitis.
The children range in ages from 3-18-years-old. They are taught the same basic
concepts other Kenyan schools teach, including English and Swahili, but learn
it all through Kenyan Sign Language. Often a deaf child's sibling will also
attend the school, so that they too can learn sign language to help translate
for them back home.
A decent education is an extremely rare and costly commodity for any child
living in Kenya. Although deaf children are Anunda's priority, she couldn't
bear to turn eager hearing children away, so she added classes for them, too.
Those classes are held in separate classrooms. Hearing children are also taught
sign language, a skill that could be a very valuable asset to them in this
country where interpreters are sparse.
Once Beatrice convinced the parents of deaf children to let them attend the
school, she was faced with another obstacle; many of the deaf kids lived very
far away and it was dangerous for them to make the long journey and cross
the busy roads and intersections on their own. With help from Angel Covers,
a Broomfield, Colorado-based volunteer organization, which helps orphaned
and destitute children around the world, Beatrice was able to add four small
rooms on to her home. They lovingly call these dorms, which house thirty-six
children, "Angel Cottage."
Beatrice said, "It's a bit congested," and that is a huge understatement.
Four children sleep on one twin-sized bunk bed and the children who cannot
cram onto a bed snuggle up next to each other with blankets on the floor.
There have been many improvements to the school since my visit two years ago.
They have expanded and now teach 250 children, have a water tower that brings
running water to the school and have installed latrines. In addition, the
school was recently awarded a grant from the Vista Hermosa Foundation that
provides each child with lunch everyday. This is a huge step toward improving
the children's overall well-being. For many of these children this lunch will
be their only meal of the day.
It's incredible how much the Humble Hearts School for the Deaf has evolved
with its limited resources. The school is not only changing the lives of hundreds
of children but it is also changing attitudes in the community toward deaf
people.
Beatrice began by begging families to give these children a chance. Now every
January, they are quickly filled to capacity and have to turn children away.
When the deaf children first enter the school they are malnourished, defensive
and very withdrawn. Their lives have been extremely hard and most of them
do not have any hope. Beatrice becomes more than just a teacher to these children
and she gives them much more than just an education and a home; she is giving
them a new start in life and a chance to succeed!
Contributions to Humble Hearts School for
the Deaf can be made through the Angel Covers website www.angelcovers.org.
Kira
may be contacted at:
kiraimages@yahoo.com
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