THE LOSS & ANGUISH OF REFUGEES
Nobody wants to be a refugee, sometimes life throws at you predicaments that leave you no choice but to run away from your homeland. Read the heart-wrenching stories of these individuals who fled from DRC to Uganda in search of peace. This peace cost them families members, jobs and a chance to serve their country.
As thousands of other
refugees of the Kyangwali camp in Uganda, Jackson, 28, has a heart-breaking
story. Just a few months ago,
before fighting in his home town broke out, Jackson was living in the Ituri region
of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) with his wife and their two-year-old
daughter. After graduating from university, he was preparing to become a
professor. But the war changed everything.
His village was
attacked in the middle of the night by armed men. During flight, he lost sight
of his wife and daughter. He arrived in Uganda after crossing Lake Albert three
weeks ago. Since then, he has not heard of them and has no means to reach them.
He hopes that they too were able to flee and that he will be able to find them.
He would like to find
a job in Uganda, but to become a teacher he must speak English. Jackson has
started to take language classes in the camp, but he has a long way to go.
“I don’t want to go
back to DRC, it’s too dangerous, I saw too horrible things. Life is tough here,
and I miss my family, but I’m safe.”
Access to education is a major problem for refugee children in Uganda. Forced
to leave everything behind, families rarely have the means to send their
children to school, and for those who can, conditions are far from ideal.
In Kyangwali refugee settlement in Uganda, schools are overcrowded, with
around 100 students per teacher on average. Bernard himself teaches almost
children in his first grade class. Large gaps between the students exist and
most do not speak English, the language used in class. Despite these hurdles,
Benard does not despair and tries to do his best to help his students. Their
story is strangely similar to his as Bernard is a refugee himself and arrived
from Sudan with his parents years ago.
“I understand their
problems and I know their difficulties. Most are traumatized by what they saw.
They heard of horrible things that no child should never hear. I experienced it
myself, and I use my experience to help them the best I can.”
Bana landed in the small fishing village of Sebagoro in Uganda on a
Tuesday morning. As many other refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo,
she fled from her home country by boat across Lake Albert, which separates the
two countries.
Several months ago, before the war began, her husband moved to Uganda to
find a job. At that time, she could not follow him because she was heavily pregnant,
and as such she stayed behind in their village. But when fighting broke out
close to her village and the situation became too dangerous, she decided to
leave with her four children aged between 2 months to 6 years.
“I used to be a dressmaker. I
would love to get back to dressmaking here, but I have no equipment, I lost
everything when I fled. At least here, there is peace. I hope we will be able
to rebuild our lives and my children can have a better future.” she says,
only a few hours after their arrival in Uganda.
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