Friday, February 20, 2015

On  life in slums.   

This time the focus is on people who live in slums, many of whom live on less than one US dollar per day.
A slum is "a squalid and overcrowded urban street or district inhabited by very poor people" ( Oxford Dictionaries)

Slums are found in cities all over the world, but in Sub-saharan Africa more than 200 million live in slums. That is 62 out of every 100 people, the highest ratio in the world. (Source UN- habitat qouted in "The Africa Report") The Africa Report
To illustrate, this newsletter focuses on one example:

Nairobi, Kenya, is one of many cities in the world growing at an alarming rate. In 1911 the town was founded as a station on the new East African Railway.
By 1963, Nairobi had transformed from the small main city in the English colony of Kenya to capital of the independent country Kenya. In 1963 the population was 350.000 (to be ins; since it has grown to 3.14 million and the city is now the largest between Cairo and Johannesburg.
See the poster “Nairobi: Impacts of Urban Growth” (pdf)

Nairobi is a bustling center of commerce, industry, and governance, with living areas for the wealthy and the middle class. Around these areas huge townships have developed, best described as a mix of cheaply built and often unfinished blocks of flats, with slums beyond.
I have recently visited a corner of one of these slums, Kawangware, in the Nairobi suburb of Westlands.


The slum dwellers live in long shacks, each subdivided into individual rooms, one per family. Each family room has one window and one door. 


Dry toilets are located near the end of each long shack ( see photo above). Each family pays rent, although low, to the landlord owner.




Red mud is everywhere. During November, part of the "rainy season with short showers", it rains once or twice every day. Accordingly, the humidity is high and it may take up to 5 days for washed clothes to dry.  There's little place for children to play, because the distance between shacks is tight, as these areas also provide circulation for those living in the shacks. 

I was invited to visit the local Reformed Church of East Africa by the pastor and his wife. A few years ago their congregation had decided to build a new church at the corner of this slum area.





 This church is a spiritual meeting place but also much more than that.
- The children of the slum use the ground floor of the church as their playground. The ground floor is constructed as a parking lot, with the church above, on pillars.


 This church also accommodates a nursery school  and a pre-school class at the ground floor of the building.


 The church also manages a 6.000 liter fresh water tank piped from the urban water system. Every day people come to fill their own 20 liter water containers. A group of women are planning to fill water bottles from the tank and sell these in the area.


A temporary kitchen provided by the church is located in a freestanding tin shack at the side of the church building. Here, meals of ugali (sticky porridge of maiz flour ) and green kale are prepared and served to the children for lunch, every day. It's filling and takes the hunger away.


One could see in the eyes of every child that taking part in activities in this church building meant much more to them than a meal a day. Here they seem to feel safe, and maybe this creates hope for their future.  



 A note from my friend and proof writer, Glenn, in Indiana: “This example seems to say that software can trump hardware. Simple facilities, well-organized and used, can yield great results. This is the kind of thinking we need more of!”

See the Kawangware Parish  website www.rceakawangware.org
and Facebook  page RCEA KAWANGWARE

Around the world, people living in slums are taking initiatives and making positive changes where you would think change was not possible. Find your own examples: Search on the internet "slum & change", "slum & hope", " slum & project" etc.

Here is one more amazing example, this one from South America:
"Landfill Harmonic - The world sends us garbage… We send back music".


This letter is a tribute to the children, young people, men and women who make a difference in the lives of people who have to fight for survival of their families and themselves every single day.

Recommended reading (for high school students & above) on why and how slums are developing: "Planet of slums" by Mike Davis

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My warmest thanks to the leadership and concegration of Kawangware Parish for making me feel at home 10.000 km. from home

To read any of the previous newsletters simply visit the blog

Yours,
Egon Hedegaard
Educational consultant, independent instructor, and Developer of Education

Email: eghedegaard@gmail.com
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