August 18, 2019
in reply to
Missing user
Are you sure there are utilities in the area of the houses your sponsored children live in? I see from your profile photos: One child in Columbia and one in Zambia. You are thinking about giving the gift of electricity. You have golden hearts, but is that attainable? Is that realistic? In both Columbia and Zambia, those struggling with poverty mostly rent, their homes are not their own. Their landlords are unconcerned about basic services because basic services are not part of life for the very poor. You can go to Google Image or another search engine and look at the areas where CI children and their families live...there are very few utility polls. In many places, there are no streets, just dirt paths between shacks, no addresses on their homes, no glass windows (just cloth-draped openings), no doors. None of the children/youths I sponsor have water in their homes. Many have meals cooked on stone or earthen ovens; In Zambia, all are using mbaula stoves which are small, charcoal-based metal baskets. Charcoal is a major household cost in the compounds of Lusaka, which is why when you send an EG (
over $100 USD Extra Monetary Gift
) they often choose bundles of charcoal. Yes, check with CI to see if your two are exceptions. All sponsors can do is share what we know, and that is: These families are very, very, very poor, every day is a survival challenge. Some give their children warm water for breakfast because there is not enough food for three meals a day.
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