I have spent the last few days sending out letters to the 100 plus sponsors who fund the education of 150 students at Namwianga Christian Secondary School and George Benson Christian College. The motto of the US Sponsorship program is Building Leaders, Changing Lives. The story of Gift is an ideal illustration of how the sponsorship program does just that. I interviewed Gift last summer during our trip to Zambia. It was a tough interview for me, because I was so touched by this young man's story that I had to hold back my tears. I hope that Gift's resilience and faith will encourage all of us to have faith in difficult times.
Gift is an impressive young man. Articulate, smart, and confident, it is not
surprising that he was chosen to serve as NCSS Headboy , the highest leadership
position in the school. The title of
Headboy is respected in Zambia, and for the rest of Gift’s life, it will be
something that shows his excellence and leadership. Americans would compare it to having “Eagle
Scout” on a resume.
When you hear Gift’s story, it makes his achievements even
more remarkable. At age 13, Gift lived
in the capital city of Lusaka with his parents and 5-year-old sister. His father managed a supply company for the
government, and they lived in a comfortable, modern house. Gift attended a private boys’ school.
All of that changed in an instant when his parents were
killed in a car accident. A week after
his parents died, Gift was sent to live with his grandmother in a remote
village in the bush. He had never met
his grandmother, nor had he ever been exposed to village life. He was separated from his sister who stayed
in Lusaka, and he was also separated from the only lifestyle he had ever known. He went from a house with electricity and
running water to a thatched hut shared with his grandmother and four other
orphans she is raising. Instead of the
private boys’ school, he attended a rural school with other village kids.
Gift tells his story without emotion, but one can imagine
how hard it must have been. At first he
was miserable, refusing to go to school or to cooperate with his
grandmother. Eventually he decided that
he had to make the best of his situation.
He worked hard in school and became part of his village family and
community. The transition, he knows, was
made easier by three George Benson Christian College graduates who were
teaching at his village school. “They
called me over to their house to watch TV,” he recalls, and their friendship
and influence helped him adjust. Gift
excelled in school and became a student leader.
His GBCC mentors made sure that he applied for sponsorship at Namwianga
Christian Secondary School and gave him good recommendations. Gift knows that sponsorship changed his life: “I would be sitting at home in the village if
not for my sponsorship. There was no one
who would have paid for my high school fees.”
Gift is very grateful for the opportunities he was given,
and he has high hopes for the future. He
wants to become a doctor. Gift’s
remarkable story is another example of how the sponsorship program is
fulfilling its mission of Building
Leaders and Changing Lives.
There are hundreds of other young people like Gift waiting for sponsors so that they can go to school at Namwianga. If you would like more information about how to sponsor a student, please reply to this blog post with your contact information. I will answer you personally and will not post your reply or information.
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