y VT % W onl snn >\ 1e His experiences will remain [@NXMUTE § Em { mug f P Alak ud 0 99 a t W *n with him a lifetime. He realized _ Wl lnlcal Ei omaiinading 6 w e 02 N fa y *; ‘ i ~3 ) sf‘ y Ja¢ w M\ _ carly in his journey that Tanzania S ts es "i; mt ate en n d ‘\ j ;.# TD s s \ _ is a beautiful country, but its # f @ * P l WH a | i _ Amikay ues people have nothing, and little Te P * 4 R h t "P. ï¬mw \‘ $ Jlâ€piww NCE hops M q e B f â€" uk 4 OME dn ce . d i6 '(he V , The village of Kilema set up by â€f«' , bimaal y / ".; l ‘ Cl N * : N@g z: the Catholic Church is small, but k M" prr . Iny t JB B oo =*@ ; towest a #..> over 100,000 live in the nearby ) [ P _ | \ [R > ® \‘ h ye bush in crushing poverty. There _ Pwag iiy.( Y P \ J ‘ Ns is WB °. s . are four primary schools, a .. iem@W d e †ko P92 on Py f I secondary school and a vocational ce * i J : ; uP Ww . SNaNL f Â¥ Wl\ _ gehool to serve their children. But _ [E F _ j | C a s .. @0 9 1\ the vocational school has four _ Si@a 7 _ uy ' m <fa®"7 " s id Â¥ t sewing machines and 40 students, P es © ; ¢./ m J Waas _ _ P ail" â€" se ~\â€" l Teaching in the impoverished »;q»s“‘: 4 a ol | [ j m crl ba‘ ib ToR 60 9y TA®! â€" _""| _ schools is from another era when . @RMiRiis Â¥ _ $% wlA _ s 1. s C â€" MJ LK ;f’ii; > s~ <O@| _ resources were limited and canes N ~ T0 5* e "C . e NP / % ~NcE EPE ; ‘| _ were used to enforce discipline. m 2,4 4‘ * i *PY ~ Go . _ e 10 Alrc. M EDLE . sc ‘The more prosperous families â€" P WBzX®IN / _ Smoap" A i C‘[ is falP ye; i: ce E * it s > on 4 hnd 4 hÂ¥ i °. im t widk &n $ & *A# ___=|_ light their simple homes with .. W k*N"s Â¥ 4. S t 1 M ald, ; "imad h 00 h 4 *\i || 4 i o > kerosene lamps. On the day Mr. ;A u* ’(,v P | w m | T Ek _ _ PBA BE 17 450 <s|_ Kawzenuk arrived,; two orphans fnimititiontonnatin in V won / oh. ~~ _ nCt * _| _ died in a fire started with the j Prioto countEsy Jeer Kawzenur T ty highly flammable and expensive _ CDCI West principal Jeff Kawzenuk holds a baby abandoned by her :« weital 4 % 4 HOITSICI%UHTESY EIF‘ A"éZE';‘.â€" liquid. young mother miles outside the village of Kilema, Tanzania. The child CDCI West principal Jeff Kawzenuk says sixâ€"yearâ€"old Dennis loved his The group he was in took with _ now lives with her great, great grandmother and grandfather who have > new tuque so much he wore it all day under the hot African sun. it 75 solarâ€"powered lights and set _ lost the remainder of their family to AIDS. oo _ nnmmemereriariprrceeprerPingggnraremmmmmmmneess ... ... esns mm mm [hree weeks in the rem i f Kilema, Tanzani ree weeks in the remote vi age 0O ema, LanZzanla pesre ho mrtie acuy reccoy, u.. e t h hm on ce oT oig] kitchen table. It‘s not about imposing our Kawzenuk says the people are positive and r M’ hi °> _ â€" i e mir Frrrrin io ie e e lifestyle on them. They have their own work hard. f j {.& feonig P \:2"‘“-"'7 e Ww W*«r‘ is + I culture, but they need to eat and the There was plenty of help with the school itz 8 oA " CBP3 2t( a + es hardworking Tanzanians he met cookhouse project they were doing. The o U C wghel ° esay T ( f.l‘ ',‘a m W hi ra understand the value of education. kh t th doing. The _ M . _[‘ _3,4 s ham sily :114 ) 1 i 35 i one it was ;iplaacling ha.(i]bteen de}sltr(iyed in I#"â€"~</ MV k l _E uoi Te e emmmnied tss ’% Â¥ wa?;i‘ (i)rllltlgp}’;lf%l gfn t;“iér }Yiar;lxu:}%% ;)falgtt:;';lalcig an earthquake, along with two schools. c n z/. j § ‘ mm C 0 fhraganig .» r The schools have been empty for a year > «.. > / 1M r"‘)" €aan s * xe‘iï¬ i mcouiiiie return to work when one of his secondary with no immediate prospect of being | i6/. N /f e hi §3 c o â€" * school students didn‘t want to walk too far replaced. Nohokes =~ ./3 j ( 3A d L;‘g‘, 3 uds ,i{_ S ; xt }10'0?11 c;)-gl;; g;avg;r;%nitï¬l I;gv};is i1u?it fgeturned In introductory meetings with school |»â€" . d | =4 / M ow J | mt . . ' a shed fiveâ€"yearâ€" administrators, the number one concern B‘ .. f d fe. > d V \\5 w ~ + f â€"â€" ie ol%s; vialketdtelg%t rr1111e§ on mour:itamqus ; was the need for 10 new toilet pits to [# } Paxt _ F10 /{,"\ 2 Py 9 ) B 200 lc ie t e mt ncation replace the two now serving the 350 . _ "*<_ 1 4 * J 4. -vfl;‘ F oy â€" BA gr y ce. students. p R F |\ <Sirg matal â€"<grms A ‘:s\'ï¬â€™ k.ik _ .. Jj w / Big problems t When the truck loaded with bricks |My Nn d 5 p esn ) â€" t P if [ i * ; 3 s x tyouse f F e s C ) f Expanding on some of the pressing arrived on the cookhouse site, 50 nineâ€" and 1 * C € || n o As P sccblems nemuseal Thae vosdsiare ; 4 i d up to help, forming } p y ' °C _ ; ; § 10â€"yearâ€"old kids showe s ky 4 S unimaginable. How do you get to people? a line to move the 15â€"20â€"pound bricks from S 1ds / $ : | How do they get hydro?" the truck to the job. The job was done in 15| PX â€"â€"*xRz> 1 a If Mr. Kawzenuk was impressed by the ml<eli._ i ewed byack of fund N (g Eue =~ tye k * condition of the roads, he was even more ork is slowed by lack of funds, and by ~tect ied P 26 4 3 E4 taken by the transportation. | lack of tools.d T'heil cgmen_tlls mtlxeg by h}::?;i, o. Aale e (x hy e e o T;:lventslf-four people, some with chickens gravel moved pail by pail, water brought to _ * Asi@@iien _ Je g» _ = °_ i s WO on their laps or three sheets to the wind, the site in fiveâ€"gallon pails. Materials are . &RA OOX ., ‘ M \. t J ,&5“ would be hanging off the minivans t by machete. Jeff was surprised that i mï¬ e F i c imported from China or Japan as the (égncrs(,ete could be cut to within a quarter o o in e uies lurched along the pathwaysl.) You coulg inch of the desired thickness in the hands Jeff Kawzenuk and an HIVâ€"infected worker take a break while young orphans and a negotiate a 10â€"km. ride for 20 cents. of someone experienced with the cutting grandfather look on in the village of Kilema, Tanzania.. Perhaps one of his biggest surprises was Q\} tool. (e? f