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.
โMy pride being a Kenyan is so high,โ she said, “so I try to wear a lot of clothes and represent myself.โ
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, sheโll join a group of six fellow Kenyan immigrants on a two-week trip home focused on community service. Itโs 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 โaction.โ
โThe idea of them going to Kenya came from them,โ said Geoffrey Soyiantet, founder of Vitendo4Africa. โIโm so proud of them.โ
The teens have beenย fundraisingย and collecting supplies for months. Each will use half their luggage allotment to carry pens, notebooksย andย sanitary pads. Theyโll 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, itโs her first time returning to Kenya since emigrating.
โWeโll feel like weโll leave a mark,โ she said. โThe school supplies, if we provide them, theyโll 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 theyโve previously raised funds.
Gracemary Nganga moved to St. Louis when she was nine. Now 17, sheโs been back twice since. Nganga knows Kenyans see her differently when she returns.
โPeople always have this mentality of you that youโre from America so you have all the money in the world, and youโre so well off and things like that,โ said Nganga, who is involved in numerous clubs and student groups at Hazelwood West, where sheโll be a senior.
Nganga said they donโt have the โsavior mentalityโ some foreigners can have on mission trips, where they think theyโre solving every ill.
โThey think theyโre a hero. And I donโt 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.
โSince Iโve lived that, I understand that,โ she said.
โThere, you see the people, their motivation they have every single day. Every single day, they try to change their lives,โ added Gacheru. โSo from there, weโll also learn, weโll get some lessons there, weโll 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 theyโll also see relatives.
โYou canโt go to Kenya without visiting your family,โ said Gacheru with a laugh.
Source-stlpublicradio.org