I arrived in Africa at 3am, after a journey involving four airplanes and thirty hours. It was dark, unbearably hot, and my passport was confiscated at the airport by armed guys who did not speak English. Tears.
World Vision Australia had asked me to do this five-day trip as part of their blogger ambassadorship program, specifically to bring attention to the food crisis in Niger.
“Hmph .. isn’t there always a food crisis in Africa?”
That was the jaded reaction I’d get from people before I left Australia. Do people care anymore? Are we used to people starving? Niger is one of the poorest and hottest countries in the world, Niger is in deep crisis. No crops, lack of food and money, and with little hope .. there are refugees of entire families and villages on the move. Desperate. Imagine leaving everything you have ever known .. only to travel a far distance and arrive in a worse place?
A few hours after I arrived, I found myself in a makeshift camp with Korean mumblogger Kim and German radio announcer Steffi. We were brought together to spread the word back to our respective countries. The camp was hideous. Dreadful. It haunts me, now that I am safely back home. These children with ragged feet and conjunctivitis, scraps of clothes, hardly any food. Yet heralding our arrival like we were some kind of heroes. I was not a hero, had nothing for them except to bear witness to them. Had to put my sunglasses on so they couldn’t see me cry.

Eden Riley took these photos during her trip to Africa
Every day was a whirlwind of driving hours to far-off remote and traditional villages. The landscape was biblical. We witnessed World Vision-funded medical programs literally saving lives every day, with health check-ups on pregnant women and babies. Malnourished children hungrily eating their Plumpy Nut; never has somebody eating seemed like such a heartbreaking and intimate thing.
We drove to blooming vegetable gardens that had been implemented by seeds and work from World Vision. We visited villages with new wells providing them with clean drinking water for the first time in their lives, all funded by World Vision. People don’t get sick, from water now.
To stand in these places, to see the actual physical results of donors money … was an incredible and heartening experience. Australians have a lot to answer for, over there. We are among the most generous donors in the world, and we have done GOOD.
Each day I would write on my blog the things I had seen and experienced .. the response was astonishing and made me cry. Again. People were sponsoring children as a direct result of reading my posts. People were opening their hearts and wallets, giving one-off donations, talking to their children, asking what help could they do.
I’m home now, struggling a bit with the things I have seen as I sit back in my big house with my ridiculous four-wheel drive. I keep thinking about the dusty camp on the first day … wondering if the children have eaten today. My children eat every day.
I’ll most likely be an advocate for World Vision for the rest of my life. They do good work, in the world. It’s as hard and as simple as that.
Eden Riley is a mother and writer in the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney. She blogs at Edenland www.edenriley.com and is on twitter as @edenland
World Vision Australia are at www.worldvision.com.au and on twitter as @WorldVisionAus






Comments
36 Comments so far
Malnourished children hungrily eating their Plumpy Nut; never has somebody eating seemed like such a heartbreaking and intimate thing.
http://www.hometeaminspection.com/quinte
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Thank you for raising awareness of this famine crisis Eden. You write from the heart, in a way that people can relate to and are motivated to mobilise. The awareness you created through your trip is fantastic. As I mentioned, you inspired me to donate to World Vision through Workplace Giving. Thank you.
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Thanks for highlighting this Eden, it breaks my heart but I have decided to sponsor a child! Also, I thought you looked familiar and I realised Mrs Woog had a link to your blog a little while ago!
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I think people are a bit ‘donation-jaded’ – I try hard to fundraise for a grass-roots organization in India whose school I taught at for six months, and it is a very hard slog to get people to part with money. Particularly for small, local organizations – at least World Vision has ‘brand power’ so to speak. I know it is a fantastic organization, but it would also be excellent if people would give to local, grassroot NGOs – they know the people and have local knowledge, they have much smaller running costs and it’s great to fund something that locals are doing for themselves. If anyone happens to be interested, see http://www.aidindiaaustralia.com
I have never worked in or on behalf of Africa before, but I also get a lot of “there are a lot of rich Indians” or “India is very wealthy country”. Yep, so wealthy that 350 million people are living on less than $2 a day, and that a whopping 61% of rural Indians don’t have access to basic sanitation (wouldn’t want to have Delhi Belly, would you?) I think that because we have for so long in the West been seeing images of starving children, and because now that, from an armchair-view at least, the world is a shrinking place where “everything is the same”, a lot of people think the problems of the world are solved. The view is that, “I saw a person in Africa yakking on their mobile phone, so everything is fine”. The struggle for global equality in standards of living is sooooo far from over. Organizations from World Vision, to UNICEF, to all of the little guys trying to just do their bit for their own communities, need all of the support that we can give. Even if it’s just a tiny bit. It all mounts up, and a little goes a much longer way when its spent locally in the developing world.
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I followed your journey, Eden, and I wrote about my visit to see my sponsor child in Kenya in 2000. http://ourbigexpatadventure.wordpress.com/2012/04/17/a-not-so-typical-day/
For years I put up with friends and families’ snide remarks about how my sponsor child was playing Playstations and watching TV courtesy of my sponsorship. Nothng could have been further from the truth. His village shared ONE tap, the family relied upon the sponsor programme for basic medical care (worming, vitamin supplements), school fees and supplementary food when needed. Because of sponsorship John completed a tailoring course before he left the programme and my sponsorship went to a new famly from the same village.
You did good stuff bytaking that trip, Eden. Very good stuff. Never, ever doubt that.
X
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Eden, we already sponsor two Australian children through the Smith Family but because of your article I am setting up a regular donation to an aid organisation as well. Thank you.
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Wow Josie, that is just utterly brilliant. The world needs more people like you, who just give when they can.
X
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If you can sponsor a child, then DO IT! Mr Woog and I decided 12 years ago not to give each other Christmas gifts and sponsor a child instead. She is about to complete her final year of education. What a sensational gift! x
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Mrs Woog, what a bloody wonderful thing. Good on you, and your (hot) husband. XXX
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Mrs Woog I love this idea! I’m going to tell my family to forget mothers day presents from now on & instead we’ll sponsor a child. Thankyou for the brilliant idea!
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Best present ever! xxxxx
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Eden thank you so much for this, you are awesome and I am so happy and relieved to know for sure that our donations to World Vision do really help people. I hear so many conflicting stories about the directions in which these funds go after they leave here and it’s good to know help is actually getting to the people who need it most.
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YAY HOLLY. What’s awesome about World Vision is how transparent they are when it comes to their distribution of funds. And honestly … I went over there and ended up with way, way more questions than I originally had. Tough questions .. and they answered me.
I can 100% promise you, your donations save lives. Not just “help” save lives … actually save lives. The money you sent goes towards things like buying Plumpy Nut for Zenouba … http://www.edenriley.com/2012/04/zenouba-starfish.html
So, you are doing good things in the world and I sincerely commend you for that.
eden
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Hi Edan.
Writing about developing countries can be difficult for people who fly in and out without spending much time getting to know the country and the people. Here’s an excellent guide on “how to write about Africa”. It’s a must read:
http://www.granta.com/Archive/92/How-to-Write-about-Africa/Page-1
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Just curious as to what you would have preferred Edan write about; given the fact her trip was sponsored by World Vision for the purpose of observing and then writing about her brief experience? I read your link and take the article’s (well written and amusing) point but I think it’s location as a comment to this article is misplaced. Yes, positive stories about African countries and people are important; but I think you’ll agree that given there are only 7 comments on this story versus 300+ on any about celebrity/birth/parenting/body image on this site, highlighting the currnt state of some African countries is still important.
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Bree, thank you so much for this. And we certainly do live in a celebrity-obsessed culture .. it’s good to see people actually do care about more meaningful things.
eden
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Eden, thank you for bringing awareness and first-hand insight into life in West Africa. As a person who has lived in 3rd World countries, I found your stories compassionate, genuine and heartfelt – not pandering to stereotypes at all. In your brief visit you were able to observe and powerfully communicate the realities. Thank you. x
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Hi Bree. I’m really glad that Eden is writing about the situation in West Africa. That’s a fantastic thing to do and good on World Vision for running this blogger program to spread the word. My concern is with the way she’s written about it. Not in an intentionally misleading or derogatory way (I have no doubt Eden has the best of intentions), but as is often the case with people experiencing poverty for the first time, when they reflect on the experience to others they can sometime pander to stereotypes of a hopeless Africa just waiting for wealthy foreigners to come save them.
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Mark you spelt my name wrong.
Do you want to get in a fight with me? Do it properly. Focus, Mark. Hit me where it hurts. I’ve already read that article. What else ya got, Mark? BRING IT.
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Hi Eden. Sorry for getting your name wrong. I don’t want a fight. I’m really glad that there are people like you in Australia who care about this stuff enough to do what you did.
I’d prefer to have a constructive discussion on how we elevate the way we talk about these issues so we don’t pander to stereotypes and make sure we present people living in African countries with dignity and respect.
There’s an excellent report from Oxfam and Bond in the UK that talks about the serious negative effects of engaging with people using the “charity” frame that you deployed in your blog. As someone who works in communications, I find it fascinating.
As someone blogging about development, I think you’ll find the same: http://findingframes.org/report.htm
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At first glance I thought your comment, though misguided, was well intentioned. Having now read the article you referenced, I can see that you’re just a jaded, sad and probably slightly jealous, observer of life.
What are YOU doing that can possibly equate to the effort that Eden is putting into this cause?
You don’t have to like World Vision, or even Eden. But it’s very difficult to not respect what they’re trying to do by teaming up and talking about this very difficult subject.
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I work for a human rights based anti-poverty agency called ActionAid Australia. Although my comment is from a personal rather than organisational point of view.
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Well then I understand even less why you would be dismissive of Eden’s efforts. And I am sorry for the name calling… glad that I am proved wrong.
I am very involved in volunteering my time to a cause that is close to my heart, and can understand that you might have frustration when you see someone with less experience write to such a large audience from a position different to your own.
But that’s the whole point with Eden. She writes from her heart.. she doesn’t claim to be an expert… just someone that tells it as she sees it.
And if she can raise awareness regarding the famine in Niger, I think that’s a wonderful thing. I’m not donating to World Vision, as I already have an organisation working in Africa that I help. But I think World Vision is doing a great thing by helping raise awareness through wonderful people like Eden rather than sending another celebrity.. or depending upon one-way advertising.
Good luck to you, Mark. And I think ActionAid could do worse than to raise awareness of their own efforts by reaching out to the general public through the blogging community.
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I did the 40 hour famine every year for about 6 years as a teenager. I myself am from a third world country and do donate quite a bit but I definitely think I can afford to sponsor a child through world vision. Thanks for your post.
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Sharon, I used to do the 40 Hour Famine too! I remember when it first came out! I’m going to do it this year, maybe with my boys as well.
Thank you for commenting xx
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Thanks Eden for all that you have done and continue to do – I think we all need a reminder that the worldwide hunger crisis is far from over.
We sponsor a child but after seeing your post I’m seriously considering adding a couple more from Africa to the budget. I wish more people would sponsor or contribute – such a heartbreaking situation these human beings are in. They are really no different than us other than the country they are born in.
Keep up the good work Eden and I urge all Mamamia readers to seriously consider sponsorship or some kind of support to causes such as World Vision – we can actually make a difference.
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Yes! “We can actually make a difference ..” So so true. And as a result of this and people like you sponsoring more children, I am going to sponsor another child as well. So thank YOU.
xx
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That is awesome!
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Love your work Eden, going where I could not.
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Thanks Belinda. I still can’t quite believe I went there.
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Our sponsor child in Ethiopia has got married so we are sponsoring a new child – a boy in West Africa. Eden – you’re a fricken legend!
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YAY NIKKI! Thank you so much for telling us that here … seriously. People like you give me hope. XX
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I’ve been thinking of sponsoring a child in World Vision Australia for a few weeks now..I’m on a permanent wage and my kids are old enough to really get into the idea of helping a child and their family on the other side of the world. This article just cemented my decision. Thanks Eden x
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Eden you moved me to tears. Definitely going to donate to World Vision now. Thanks so much for sharing this. We take so much or granted here, we are so blessed. As Tim Costello once said “by being born in Australia we have all won the lottery of latitude”. Touche.
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Veruca, what a beautiful quote from Tim, I’ve never heard that before. And good on you for donating .. I can guarantee you, your money is going towards good. A water well, some seeds … some Hope.
eden
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Oh, really? WOW …. that has been the response from so many people, in regards to my trip over there. SO heartening. And, as soon as I shuffle some of my own finances around, I’m going to sponsor another child too. People like you have motivated me. So thank you!
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