A group of people, during
the just-ended Easter festivities, presented the children of Remar Orphanage in
Ho, the Volta Regional capital, with a pair each of Horseman shoes – aka the
President’s shoes as according to President Mahama, he wears that brand of
shoes.
The other items donated
included, bags of rice, maize, beans, several tubers of yam, cooking oil,
detergents, carton of tomato paste and chickens.
The children, who numbered
about 26, were highly excited when they realized that they were among the
privileged few to wear shoes manufactured by the same person that the President
buys his from. Many of them unconsciously shouted in concert thus, “I will
become a President,” as they jumped about.
This gesture was initiated
by Frederick Duodu Takyi, the Volta Regional Manager of Western Publications
(Publishers of DAILY GUIDE).
Presenting the items at the
Orphanage on Easter weekend, Mr. Takyi expressed gratitude to all who assisted,
including Tonyi Senaya, CEO of Horseman Shoes; Evans Nartey and Awura Abena
Agyeman of Wear Ghana, who supplied school bags to the children; Ivy Duku
Plange of SBIG and Edidson Chouest, Offshore Ghana Limited, for giving T-Shirts
and pairs of shorts.
As part of the gesture, the
Volta Regional Office of Zoomlion Ghana Limited also fumigated the entire
Orphanage to protect the children against infections and diseases.
Abbena Ofosua Abboah-Offei
and her colleagues at the University of Ghana, Legon, also donated lots of
clothes, accessories and footwears.
The donation was
coordinated by Godfred Nelson, Benjamin Aklaku, George Asamoah, Amenuveve
Agboklu and Lambert Atsivor.
Prior to the donation, the
group also facilitated radio discussions on Ho-based US FM to create awareness
on the children’s home, which had been in the region for three years, but
lacked adequate publicity. Mr. Olivier Kedasam, caretaker of the Orphanage,
also expressed gratitude to the benefactors.
He added that “the shoes,
the bags and the dresses have solved most of our problems” but appealed for
more support, especially in the area of school fees which he admitted was a
great challenge. He was hopeful that by the time school re-opened some benefactors
would have come to their aid.
He also urged Ghanaians to
purge themselves of the perception that voluntary work and charity are for the
wealthy and foreigners saying, “It is for everybody to support…even spending a
day to play with these orphans and the less privileged is priceless.”
Meanwhile, members of the
Rotract Club of Osu RE and their Nigerian counterparts also made separate
donations to the orphanage.
Credit: Fred Duodu/Dailyguide
No comments:
Post a Comment