By Michelle Riley | Director of External Affairs
Dozens of children were there to greet Kristine Pearson as she delivered 28 of Lifeline Energy’s solar-powered lights to orphaned children several miles outside Nyamata town in Rwanda’s Bugesera district. Dressed in their best clothes (although that may mean the only clothes they have), many walked for up to two hours to the distribution session held at a community center and some had received lights in previous distributions.
The children – many of whom have been forced by circumstances to lead their households – said they spent a disproportionate amount of the meager monies on kerosene to be able to see at night. However, with our renewable lights – which were first distributed last year, the money they are now saving from not having to buy fuel goes towards school supplies, food, soap and other necessities. Older children earn money by digging in a neighbor’s field or doing odd jobs.
The children who received lights in December or May already told Kristine that with using kerosene, they found it difficult to study or even go to the toilet after the sun went down – and in Rwanda that is at 06:30 every night given its proximity to the equator. One child told her that before the light, if there was an emergency at night they had to “wait until the day.” They can now handle the problem when it happens.
One recipient of a light, 14-year-old Daria, who lives with her sister and widowed, unemployed mother in a two roomed mud and thatch house, was delighted. She said, “I can now study at night. Normally, by the time I get home from school, fetch water and do other work around the house, I have no time to study. I also won’t have to spit up ‘black’ anymore from the fuel.” Children and adults alike always complain about the the irritation that kerosene causes to the eyes and lungs.
Kristine first traveled to the area in 1999 and says since then massive changes have occurred. She says: “It used to take over two hours to just to get Nyamata town from Kigali, but with the newly tarred road, it only takes 40 minutes.” In addition, all tarred roads have sidewalks for people to walk safely. Even in rural areas, many of the dirt roads have been resurfaced and have gutters for drainage during the rainy season. Nyamata town now has electricity, but the rural areas around it do not, making the lights all the more important.
Bugasera districts was one of the hardest hit during the 1994 genocide. Prior 1994, the population was estimated to be 64,000, afterwards it was 2,000.
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