Our Service Centre office is also the place we stay in Nigeria |
For many of our Service Centres (SCs) or local offices across Africa this year, we are really pushing to support them better by having a member of an RST (regional support team) for longer periods of time. Lagos SC in Nigeria is no different despite it being thousands of kilometres away from the Nigeria support team here in South Africa. In this last trip, I arrived in Lagos to meet Jackie (one of our Kenyan volunteers). One of the primary reasons for me going to Nigeria for this trip was to spend time training our new bookkeeper, Vivian. She is a young woman with lots of potential. Many of my days in Nigeria were spent in the office training her in our financial procedures and processes. But I also had the opportunity to spend a couple of days in our communities.
We work in two communities in Nigeria, one in Lagos and one in another town called Ibadan, about 3 hours away. In Lagos, our community, Ilaje, is very urban and a slum area, which is a huge contrast to many of our other communities across Africa. Our other community, Apatuku, is by contrast to Ilaje, much more rural.
Left to right: Matthew (a teacher in Apatuku CBO), myself, Efe (Toyin's daughter), Toyin, Jackie |
On our second day in Apatuku, we were able to do some Holy Home Visits. As we walked through the community, it was very quiet. I think it was made even quieter by the fact we had just come from the bustling city of Lagos a day earlier. On one of our visits, we met a young boy named Joseph. Joseph, who is 12 years old, had lived with his grandmother from birth. His mum and dad realised they could not bring him and his brothers up on the income they had so Joseph's grandmother stepped in to take care of him. Joseph's brother now also lives them after their parents’ situation got even worse because their dad got sick and their only source of income dried up. He now lives with his brother and grandmother. To earn some kind of income, Joseph's grandmother sells maize meal with corn but each one only sells for N10 (3p or $0.06) each. The Care Workers at Apatuku CBO have helped and encouraged Joseph to keep attending school and continue learning. Now, he loves learning and wants to keep on studying and work hard to eventually become a doctor. He will soon be taking the exams to get into secondary school and feels ready. At the end of our visit Joseph shared to us “I am confident that I can get 100% by God's grace”. This is a huge testimony to what God can do through people who are willing to put up their hand and say I will do what it takes to walk with those who have no voice. Care Workers, like Elijah, are able to visit children like Joseph, encourage them and being a parental figure in their lives.
Ilaje Care Workers and teachers praising God for his faithfulness |
As I reflect on my trip to Nigeria, I am constantly reminded of the dedication of our Care Workers who give absolutely everything they have to care for the most vulnerable children in Africa. It gives me an increased motivation to know that the numbers I work on most days are helping to support Care Workers like Mrs Joseph care for children like Sarah and Joseph.
- T