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Kenyan man who migrated to Canada in 1969 returns to Kenya to build hospital

Kenyan man who migrated to Canada in 1969 returns to Kenya to build hospital
Sylvia and Stephen Scott, founder of Caring Global Partners work on the project in Kenya in March: COURTESY/PHOTO. Kenyan man who migrated to Canada in 1969 returns to Kenya to build hospital

A Kenyan Diaspora man Stephen Juma Obiero Scott migrated to Canada in 1969 and was later adopted by a Canadian couple based in Toronto who gave him their last Scott. Stephen Juma Obiero has now returned to Kenya to build a hospital, school and more. Here below is his story courtesy of therecord.com.

To escape crushing poverty while growing up in a Kenyan village is one thing. To return to that place to help others, once you’ve reached success a world away, is quite another.

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Stephen Juma Obiero Scott of Waterloo, founder of the charity Caring Partners Global, was born Oct. 26, 1948, in Matangwe, Kenya, the youngest of six. Decades later, the boy who grew up just another poor kid returned to Kenya to change the lives of everyone in his community through his charity. Stephen’s journey would be centred in faith and integrity, traits that always guided him, starting when he met the Scotts, Canadian missionaries working at his mission high school.

“He told me he was smart and likable,” so the Canadians gravitated to the teen, said Stephen’s widow, Sylvia Scott. He held the important role of Head Boy at school and had intelligence and leadership.

With the help of the Toronto-based Scotts, Stephen came to Canada in 1969 to enter the Ontario Bible College on a full scholarship. The Scotts, now deceased, officially adopted Stephen and gave him their last name.

Stephen’s choice of college was less about career choices and more about exploring the faith he’d been brought up in, a faith that had underpinned everything he did.

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After completing a degree in religious studies, he next earned an undergraduate degree at Wilfrid Laurier University then a teaching degree from the University of Toronto.

Stephen had returned to Kenya for visits while living in Canada. During one trip, he was introduced to Sylvia Adoyo Denge, from a nearby village. They were distantly related through marriage.

The couple married in 1974 and three weeks later, travelled to Waterloo, where Sylvia studied science at the University of Waterloo and nursing at Conestoga College and McMaster University. When both had graduated and were ready to enter the workforce, the only jobs available were in Moosonee, Ont., on James Bay. They were the only Africans in the community and spent much of their time coping with the cold for the two years they served in that remote place.

Stephen was teaching and Sylvia worked in the hospital. The first of their four children, Christine, was born in Moosonee. Joshua, Rachel and Sarah Scott came along after the family returned to Waterloo.

Stephen was eventually able to find a job teaching science at Waterloo Collegiate Institute. He retired in 2010.

“As a teacher, the kids loved him,” said Stephen’s former colleague Glenn Pascoe. Stephen had a commanding presence and everyone in the school called him “Chief.”

Despite their comfortable existence in Canada, the desperate need for help in their Kenyan community dominated Stephen and Sylvia’s conscience. Eventually a solution presented itself: to create a charity, bring in partners and fundraise. Together, the couple founded Caring Partners Global.

Years earlier, when Stephen left Africa to come to Canada, his mother made him promise he would return and give back to his community, said son Josh. And he did.

“He is the ultimate example of what it means to be a man of your word and living by example,” said Josh.

For 25 years Caring Partners Global has financially supported the Matangwe Community Health and Development Program. It has helped build a community centre, school and hospital, provided scholarship funds, skills training and access to clean water. Though Sylvia and Stephen grew up in rural villages, they didn’t presume to know what the Matangwe villagers needed, and asked for guidance. Stephen also wanted to ensure villagers were engaged in the project and that they would find their own way to support the program.

Stephen was skilled at building relationships, Sarah said. He recruited Glenn after learning he’d installed solar power at his cottage. Before long, Glenn was in Kenya, installing solar panels. He later joined the charity’s board.

“He was very engaging that way,” said Glenn.

The Matangwe project has “positively impacted the lives of hundreds of people within the region, and given them hope for the future,” said Ron Bell, the charity’s scholarship director, in a tribute.

In April, the couple were back in Kenya, this time looking to build a maternity unit. Plans were halted when Stephen fell ill with cerebral malaria. All four children rushed to Kenya, arriving in time to say goodbye before their father died on April 18.

“It was sudden and unexpected,” said Sylvia.

The couple was able to have a small house built in Matangwe where the family will stay when visiting the project. The house represents Stephen’s connection to home. Sylvia will continue running the charity.

“I promised I would keep the legacy going,” she said.

Stephen “had an optimistic outlook on life,” recalls Rachel about her dad. “He was always striving to do more and inspiring us.”

Source-https://www.therecord.com/

 

Kenyan man who migrated to Canada in 1969 returns to Kenya to build hospital

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