Stephen Zoure carrying one of the children |
THERE
are many married couples searching for children and are not seeing any end in
sight of their desperate search. Sadly, there are couples who are also blessed
with children but have the desire to kill them due to one form of disability or
the other which these children have.
Such is the plight of hundreds of children
born with well-known physical and social disabilities in some communities
particularly some of those located in the Eastern part of the Northern Region
of Ghana; Yendi, Chereponi, Bimbilla, Mion and their surrounding communities.
But notwithstanding the hard times being experienced
by many Ghanaians during this Christmas
yuletide, for handicapped children of the Nazareth Home for God’s Children at
Sang in the Mion District, times were much harder until Stephen Apeweh Zoure,
Northern Sector Manager of Daily Guide came around to celebrate his 36th
Birthday which fell on December 27, with them.
Items presented to the home |
Mr. Zoure also a former Northern Regional
Correspondent of The Daily Dispatch, presented bags of exotic rice, edible oil,
biscuits, fizzy drinks, milk, toilet rolls and among others to the disadvantaged
children of the Nazareth Home for God’s Children.
According to him, it was more appropriate
to donate towards the upkeep of the underprivileged during the Christmas season,
and more so, because it coincided with his birthday.
Children born as cripple, hearing impaired,
visually impaired, mentally retarded and autistic among others, risked losing
their lives at the snap of a finger in the hands of their parents and/or fetish
priests of the aforementioned communities, mostly through poisoning.
For members of these communities, such
children were a bad omen to the destiny of their parents and the entire
community and the earlier they got rid of them, the better it would be for
their own good.
According to Reverend Sister Stan Terese Mario
Mumuni of the Marian Sisters of Eucharistic Love (MASEL) and Servant of the
Nazareth Home for God’s Children, the practice of deliberately killing children
with disabilities in those communities was an age long tradition of the indigenes
there.
Stephen presents items to Rev. Stan and children |
Thanks to the Yendi Diocese of the Roman
Catholic Church led by Bishop Boi Nai who took a bold decision couple of years
ago and jumped to the rescue of some of the children who were targeted for
killing.
Currently, the total number of children in
the home is 40 with the youngest being 6 months old. But Rev. Sister Stan Terese
told this reporter, the home was at the moment faced with serious water and financial
challenges and it was difficult to cater for the feeding and special medical
needs of some of the children.
Nonetheless, she thanked Mr. Zoure for his
desire to celebrate his birthday with children of the Nazareth Home for God’s
Children and appealed to individuals and groups who were touched by the plight
of the children not to hesitate to come to their aid.