In Mutai, we found a 61 year old Grandmother named
Esther struggling to look after her two young grandchildren, Joseph (7) and
Grace (3). Since the death of her own
daughter three years ago, following the birth of Grace, Esther has done
whatever she can to help provide for them –though despite her best efforts, the
family still exist on the breadline.
We found Esther and the
children living in a dilapidated cottage on the outskirts of town. She invited us inside, to what resembled more
a junkyard than a dwelling suitable for young children –strewn across the dirt
floor were all manner of items including a broken bicycle, dozens of soiled
plastic containers and shreds of moth-eaten tarpaulin. The family sat on a single straw matt which
had seen better days, and we followed suit –they ate, bathed and slept there
and it was the only thing between them and the cold, hard, unsanitary ground
below.
Our
time with Esther left us truly humbled; we had met a woman who would stop at
nothing to take care of her family against all the odds. It seemed only right that before we left, we
vowed to do the same for her. We plan to
help Esther and other families like hers by carrying out vital repairs on homes
and finding more suitable and stable employment options so people have a chance
to change their lives and lift themselves out of poverty.