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Tuesday, November 5, 2024
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Perspective & excitement: Diaspora Kenyan teens on volunteer trip

Perspective & excitement: Diaspora Kenyan teens on volunteer trip
Perspective & excitement: Diaspora Kenyan teens on volunteer trip

Sally Gacheru is wearing a black t-shirt with the Kenyan flag embroidered on it: red, black and green, with a shield in the middle.

โ€œMy pride being a Kenyan is so high,โ€ she said, “so I try to wear a lot of clothes and represent myself.โ€

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She also wears two bracelets: one with the colors of her native country; the other red, white and blue from her adopted home in the U.S.

Gacheru, 17, moved to north St. Louis County four years ago. This month, sheโ€™ll join a group of six fellow Kenyan immigrants on a two-week trip home focused on community service. Itโ€™s part of the youth-leadership program ofย Vitendo4Africa, an organization founded by a Kenyan immigrant that helps African newcomers adjust and connect after moving to St. Louis. Vitendo is Swahili for โ€œaction.โ€

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โ€œThe idea of them going to Kenya came from them,โ€ said Geoffrey Soyiantet, founder of Vitendo4Africa. โ€œIโ€™m so proud of them.โ€

Sally Gacheru moved to north St. Louis County from Kenya with her family four years ago. “My pride being a Kenyan is so high,” she said.
CREDIT RYAN DELANEY | ST. LOUIS PUBLIC RADIO

The teens have beenย fundraisingย and collecting supplies for months. Each will use half their luggage allotment to carry pens, notebooksย andย sanitary pads. Theyโ€™ll spend two days of the trip helping to build a classroom addition to a school in western Kenya.

For Gacheru, who will be a senior at Hazelwood West High School this fall, itโ€™s her first time returning to Kenya since emigrating.

โ€œWeโ€™ll feel like weโ€™ll leave a mark,โ€ she said. โ€œThe school supplies, if we provide them, theyโ€™ll run out. But if we build a classroom, that will be a big impact that will still be there for times to come.โ€

The group will also visit an orphanage in Nairobi for which theyโ€™ve previously raised funds.

Gracemary Nganga moved to St. Louis when she was nine. Now 17, sheโ€™s been back twice since. Nganga knows Kenyans see her differently when she returns.

โ€œPeople always have this mentality of you that youโ€™re from America so you have all the money in the world, and youโ€™re so well off and things like that,โ€ said Nganga, who is involved in numerous clubs and student groups at Hazelwood West, where sheโ€™ll be a senior.

Gracemary Nganga is involved in several sports and student clubs in the Hazelwood School District. She said she doesn’t want to have a savior mentality when she returns to Kenya to volunteer. “I just want to go and help,” she said.
CREDIT RYAN DELANEY | ST. LOUIS PUBLIC RADIO

Nganga said they donโ€™t have the โ€œsavior mentalityโ€ some foreigners can have on mission trips, where they think theyโ€™re solving every ill.

โ€œThey think theyโ€™re a hero. And I donโ€™t want to have that, I just want to go and help,โ€ she said.

Having grown up in Kenya, Nganga knows what may look like a hard life to outsiders is not always the case.

โ€œSince Iโ€™ve lived that, I understand that,โ€ she said.

โ€œThere, you see the people, their motivation they have every single day. Every single day, they try to change their lives,โ€ added Gacheru. โ€œSo from there, weโ€™ll also learn, weโ€™ll get some lessons there, weโ€™ll get their motivation, the resilience to keep on going.โ€

The teens will fit in two day trips to national parks, and Nganga and Gacheru said theyโ€™ll also see relatives.

โ€œYou canโ€™t go to Kenya without visiting your family,โ€ said Gacheru with a laugh.

Source-stlpublicradio.org

 

Perspective & excitement: Diaspora Kenyan teens on volunteer trip

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