Sadly,
I cannot say that I have read many books in my life. If it were not for my
exams or general academic work, I could literally count the books I have read
in my lifetime using my fingers. Due to the minimal number of books that I have
read, the individual stories are still so vivid in my mind. I remember forging
my parent's signature in primary school to tick off with my English teacher
that I had indeed read the book! Needless to say, I had 'read' the most books
in my class!
My
sister on the other hand would read absolutely everything she could get her
hands on. Unlike me, she actually read the books! She would always recommend
books to me, but alas, if it wasn't part of the Twilight Saga, I found the
effort to psych myself up to be an almost impossible task to carry out. My
lines have always been, 'After my exams are done!' or 'during my holiday' or my
recent classic favourite is 'when I get a kindle or iPad’. Exams have come and gone,
so have holidays, and the opportunity to get a kindle even as a present has
come and has been passed off! Looking
at it now, it was her way of sharing the area in her life that she finds joy
in.
Unlike my situation, where I was given the resources but did not utilise them, in Africa, and I can only speak for Malawian government school such resources are scarce. The number of child per book is very high.
Unlike my situation, where I was given the resources but did not utilise them, in Africa, and I can only speak for Malawian government school such resources are scarce. The number of child per book is very high.
The
dream to get everyone reading gave birth to Tiwerenge Foundation. This
foundation encapsulated the joy of reading that my sister has always shared
with my mother, myself, and her friends. Tiwerenge is an organisation in Malawi
that supplies books to primary schools that need them the most. The very first
resources of Tiwerenge were the very books that I was offered to read and never
quite got around to reading. This foundation founded in Malawi has opened up
the access of books to kids who would have otherwise not had the opportunity to
these resources.
Something that
started off as a casual conversation in my parent’s kitchen, the dream shared
then was big! We discussed, looking at the use of kindles in schools. We also
looked at starting middle school book clubs, where children could come together
and share what they have read. This would get them thinking broadly for
themselves. I personally felt the latter idea to be really good as I would have
definitely been caught out with my signature forging routine! To imagine the
thought of being asked to share what I had read, the shame!
This foundation is
looking to provide skills that no one could ever steal from the children. To
equip such skills to any child is a priceless gift and significantly undervalued,
whether in a developing nation or developed. Just imagine not being able to
read, what is the price you would have paid to get that skill?
In these modern days we are sounded with over
ambitious individual and an eager population. Everyone is looking for something
that will fulfil their being, and give them that extra meaning to life. Think big and do
it, don’t ever apologise or belittle your thoughts, imagination and ideas! If
an idea such as that of a matchstick can light a room, imagine what an idea of
enlightening a whole nation can do.
As John Quincy Adam said 'The influence of each
human being on others in this life is a kind of immortality', therefore, I say
immortalise your joys, and dreams!