by
Bill Stumbaugh
This
is Sunday the 14th. We had a great breakfast at
the Gately on the Nile
hotel. And the local Rotarians from the Jinja Rotary Club
took us by bus into Jinja to purchase crafts--shirts,
basketry, wood carvings, and jewelry. I really wanted to
purchase an African shirt, but was unable to find one with a
sufficiently large enough neck opening for my big heard to
fit through. Oh well. I did find some wonderful batik
paintings instead. While waiting for my teammates, I watched
some men play a national board game called ludo on the
sidewalk. It was similar to Parchessi. They played very fast
and it was difficult to follow.
A
Ugandan member of our travel group included a 19 year old
man named Bosco Okello. Okello (Ugandans list their family
name first) was abducted when he was 12 years old by men
from the Lord’s Liberation Army (LRA) who are fighting
against the Ugandan government. The LRA is notorious for
forcing children to fight. Okello told me how he was forced
to carry huge packs (60 kilos) for ten to twelve hours, or
face death. He saw the LRA men cut the feet from fellow
youth who resisted. They were eventually shot or left in the
bush to die from infection and starvation. He said abducted
girls his age were raped and kept as concubines.
During
one fight with the Ugandan army, Okello was shot in the
lower left leg and left by the LRA to fend for himself. He
said that he survived about two weeks in the forest eating
local plants. Eventually, some hunters from the Acholi tribe
rescued him and took him to their village. They eventually
took him to the Ugandan army post (Uganda
gives amnesty to fighters who give themselves-up.) The army
took him to a hospital and later his lower leg was amputated
due to gangrene. Eventually, Okello was taken to another
hospital where he received a prosthesis. It was at this time
that Rotarian John Kirkwood from the Rotary Club of Jinja
met him and took him to the Lords Meade Vocational School
where he now lives and studies.
During
the day our group traveled to the Bujagali Falls on the Nile
River and then later to the “source of the Nile” where
it begins, flowing out of Lake Victoria for its
4,000
mile journey north through Sudan and Egypt to the
Mediterranean Sea. I was surprised to see that the Nile at
its beginning was as wide as the Colorado River near Yuma. It definitely was fast flowing with a large volume of
water. At this place, many people were riding rafts and
kayaks across the strong rapids. We took a boat trip on the Nile
and saw monkeys, cormorants, egrets, storks and iguanas
along the shore line. Along the banks also were dancers and
musicians performing traditional Ugandan songs and dances in
ethnic costumes.
Next,
we left the river and went to the Parvatiben
Madhvani
Girls
School
in Jinja. While the students were on “holiday,” and we
were unable to visit classes, we entered a building where
almost
240
boxes of new wheelchairs were stored as part of Rotary
projects. A local Rotarian explained to us that local Rotary
Clubs will work with disabled individuals of all ages to
complete an application and take a photograph which are then
submitted to the Jinja Club to request a wheelchair. The
chairs are then transported to the appropriate Rotary Club
for delivery to the needy person. Being in a country where
little is wasted, the cardboard boxes will be sold for 50
cents to people who often use it for flooring or covering in
their homes.
At
lunch time, our team was hosted by many Jinja Rotarians for
a good bye luncheon at the Ling Ling Chinese Restaurant; the
owner is a Rotarian. Many Chinese dishes familiar to
Americans were on the menu.
Uganda
and American Rotarians shared their gratitude for our
continuing partnership and its promising future on behalf of
service to the needy in
Uganda.
We
returned by mini-van to Kampala via a more inland route,
stopping for a few minutes at a Nile River access point down
river near Kanganhumera village.
In
the evening, our group was honored at party sponsored by
District Governor Tusu in his home. About 50 people attended
including James Tugume and Michael Ipiima who had been
members of the Group Study Exchange team from District 9200
to D5340 in 2006. Tusu and our DG Philippe shared warm words
of regard for our districts’ continuing collaboration and
service.
 |
Note: On January 17, the New
Vision national newspaper had a short article
about our visit to Jinja. |