‘Forgotten Kenya’ and famine in East Africa
A few years ago I did some work (see “In ‘Forgotten Kenya,’ mobile classrooms follow in nomads’ footsteps”) with the Aga Khan Foundation (East Africa) and one of their partners, Education For Marginalized Children in Kenya, in North Eastern Province in Kenya.
This is the area hosting the Daadab refugee camp, where countless stories of famine and devastation are coming in anew. When we came in August 2009 to visit pastoral families in the region, there was drought and hunger, but it was nowhere near the scale it is today. I donated what I could afford to the World Food Program yesterday. The Canadian government has also promised to match donations made by Canadians:
The federal government announced Friday that it would match donations by individual Canadians who give money to eligible, registered, Canadian charities responding to the famine. The matching funds will apply to all donations made during a 10-week period, retroactive to July 6.
For a more in-depth analysis of the famine, check out the CBC here; for photographs from the area, see the Atlantic; and for a look at the causes of the famine beyond the traditional rhetoric of drought, see the Washington Post and the CBC. Donations are a short term answer to a humanitarian disaster; but much more is needed to develop a long-term, sustainable response to this recurring crisis.







































