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Noah's Education

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Hey everyone! Last summer, I spent six weeks doing research in Uganda with a professor from UVA. Another student and I received a grant from UVA's Center for Global Health which required us to have a driver. Noah quickly became not only a critical member of the team but also a wonderful friend and someone close to my heart. He is 28 years old, working as a driver when he can find clients and searching for other jobs when he can't. He has been dreaming of going to University ever since he graduated high school, but hasn't been able to save the money required. He lives in a small room in an area called Bugolobi in Kampala, has two younger brothers, and lives close to his mom who has raised all three of them alone. His father still lives out in the village and Noah keeps in touch with him and visits him when he has the time and money to do so. He is incredibly close with his mom, working hard to do everything for her he can through helping pay for his brothers school fees, cleaning her house and clothes, bringing food to her, and spending time with her. She is one of the most beautiful and powerful women I have ever met. 
In Noah's free time he goes to the mosque to pray, spends time with his mom and brothers, watches films with friends, plays soccer, and helps people out in the community. When I walked around Bugolobi with Noah, he was smiling and waving to everyone, constatnly offering to do favors for people and laughing.
He has always dreamt of going to school to one day become a journalist or work to serve the people in some way. He has a history of studies in Records and Archive Management and was advised by many to continue at University with this field, as it will guarantee a secure job in many different areas, and allow him to go on to do whatever else he might want to do. 
Not even a week into my stay in Kampala I was sure that I wanted to pay for Noah to go to school. In fact, it was never even a question in my mind. Of anyone I had met, he was so deserving of an education. I was completely humbled by how giving people seemed to be when they had so little compared to me, and thought about how far a small amount of money goes when you give it to someone directly who keeps passing it along to others. 
I knew that I alone had enough money saved to pay for his tuition without having to ask for help from anyone else, so I told him after about a week that we should work to get his application in at the Makerere University in Kampala. He was completely speechless and shocked with graditude and worked quickly to get an application finished. The UVA professor wrote him a recommendation letter and we submitted his application. 
I knew that I wanted to try to raise enough funds to help him with other life expenses because, although he told me he could make it word, I knew that meant trying to find whatever outside work he could to keep enough money to pay for food and rent. 
We sat down together and calculated that tuition and fees total at $3,000 for three years. Additionally, we figured that for materials he would need (a computer, books, etc.) and rent and food for three years it would be around $5,000. So, I have set the goal at $8,000, and feel hopeful that with the support of family and friends we can get there.
I know this endeavor is different in that I cannot convince you to give to a cause, something that is easy to get behind, but rather to ask you to trust my own judgement and send money directly to a person. But to be able to send money to Noah is not only a way of giving him an education and brighter future, but also a way of passing money on to so many others. He is the type of person who, throughout one day, would send money to his dad in the village, pay for his brothers school fees, get food for his mom, pay for a security guard to get water on a hot day, for elderly women to get tea on a cool evening, to help out a boy volunteering to fix the roads, and to help a friend out when needed. I know that whatever money we can get to Noah will make its way around and through so many others, as giving always means more giving, and what goes around comes around, especially in a place like Uganda. To be able to have a connection to an individual and send money directly to him is so much more effective and powerful than anything through an organization. I am deeply grateful for and humbled by whatever we can raise, and know that Noah and his family are beyond thankful for what has come their way. 

xoxo
Anne Nelson 

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Donations 

  • Alex Wolz
    • $50
    • 5 yrs
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Organizer

Anne Nelson Stoner
Organizer
Charlottesville, VA

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