Ontario Community Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 10 Jan 1993, p. 2

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Product of Italy Danielle tomatoes tomatoes 28 oz. tin . chunk |Ight 3 5 oz. tuna "@ Tetley tea bags * Miracle Food Mart «e Kmart * Savâ€"A «Centre « Bradford Exchange * Perfect Portions * Cruise Holidays * Remax Specialists * Remax Specialists * Loblaws e Food City « AP «Canadian Tire * Miracle Uitra Mart 467 SPEERS ROAD OAKVILLE Telephone 845â€"9742 or 845â€"3824 Regarding any delivery problems 8 Quaker: Oats squares cereal _ Orville Redenâ€" | Eaucher opcorn * Partial Delivery Students will respond to letters Fourteenâ€"yearâ€"old Mary Wangan of Ruiri wrote to 9â€"yearâ€"old Tanya Savovic of Oakville, "Me, I can‘t afford to give you a present because I am poor." The student then wrote much about her family and the while it only sparked more questions in those who were already overly excited about the Kenyan letters. (Continued from page 1) Nordica cottage cheese Sealtest Parlour | ice cream | carton upcoming celebration of Christmas (in the religious sense). Cochrane told students Christmas in Kenya â€" with a tree of a few brown cones and leaves â€" was not what is here. Film containers filled with rocks became toy shakers for young Kenyans in Ruiru and their only Christmas present. The Brookdale students saw a shoddy hut that was the Kenyans school, and the rags that passed as clothing. An explanation that one young child worked all day at a coffee planâ€" tation while bearing his younger sibâ€" ling on his back while wearing only a towel around them both really got to Brookdale student, 9â€"yearâ€"old David Anderson. Students saw pictures of the stuâ€" dents who answered their letters and of children and adults who aren‘t sponsored for medication, food and education by World Vision. Students heard adults worked for 34 shillings or $1 U.S. per day at the coffee plantation and were ousted if they didn‘t work. "It‘s one of those situations where you‘re walking along and you get a flood ofâ€"emotion or remember someâ€" thing, then you keep going but that‘s what makes you keep going and wantâ€" ing to help," said Cochrane. From questions ranging from do Africans have flat heads to carry items on their heads to others about birth control and how the Kenyans do their laundry or eat, all were on Cochrane‘s plate from those eager to know. The African children speak Swahili with English as a second language and most of their education is religious. Moving from "standard to standard" year to year has more to do with their physical growth than school grade accomplishments, they heard. Their school is a hut type building where FINAL REbu(Tions of 30"* OR MoRE on FALL AND WINTER FASHlous 9:30â€"6:00 FRIDAY ‘TIL 9:00 STORE CLOSED WE‘D RATHER SELL IT JANUARY 11thâ€"16th THAN (ount J1t! PREâ€"INVENTORY SALE 351 LAKESHORE RD. E. OAKVILLE 845â€"61 17 moving from standard to standard means moving to a different room each year and where there are no desks, books, even pencils. Students were intrigue and appalled at stories that a cow means selfâ€"sufficiency for a family through the animal‘s milk, rather than meat, with a challenge being to keep the cow alive as well as the family. African clansmen can have as many wives as they wish so long as they keep all their wives and their children in one camp. Cochrane said there‘s no such thing as divorce although there is abandonnment, â€" though she said the worst part is that the woman is usually to busy to know she‘s been abandoned and left to struggle for her children. Brookdale students were disturbed to learn most Somali children don‘t live past age 7 and Cochrane said that those aged 35 appear as though they may be 70 years old. Cochrane did tell the Brookdale students that the African children sit totally straight and listen to every word told to them in school â€" and she noted the difference in behavior to the squirming Brookdale class. With no lighting, water, furniture and mud floors, Cochrane told about the Africans‘ huts and how some are collapsible for when the mostly nomadic peoples move locations. Cochrane said people drink out of potholes or puddles and have no washrooms. "You have to watch where you walk," she told students. The Brookdale youths also heard about the Masai tribe‘s young warâ€" riors who mix a cow‘s blood, milk and urine with ashes to make a type of what Cochrane called "gruel" to The Brookdale class is intending to return letters provided to them from the Kenyan students. *EXCLUDES SLEEPERS, ACCESSORIES AND UNDER FASHIONS

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