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This is not the Africa in travel brochures with safaris and delicious wine. This is the Africa where heavy loads are carried on undernourished heads, babies on backs and rifles in the hands of teenage boys. Here in the torrential rain, barefoot children hide under banana leaves. The soil runs deep red as if the blood of the hundreds of thousands of people who have died here from civil war and starvation have drenched the earth of this small nation to its core.
IMC has worked in Burundi since 1995, providing essential services, many of which aim to support the strained health systems and build self-reliance so when IMC leaves, the government can cope better with the needs of its population. Community health workers and traditional birth attendants are being trained, school feeding programs are being implemented and supplementary and therapeutic feeding centers provide the foundation for IMC’s programs.
Burundi, a small country in size, is densely populated with seven to eight million people. Food production, of mainly subsistence farming, cannot keep up with the population growth and degradation of the soil. There is almost no farm equipment, and in order for farmers to get their products to market, they must carry what they can on their heads or the back of a bicycle for miles. On average, each woman gives birth to nearly seven children, but many do not survive to adulthood. Currently 48 percent of the population is under 15 and a staggering 66 percent is undernourished. Life expectancy is dropping and presently lingers around 40 years so it is not surprising that Burundi ranks 171th, near the bottom of the U.N. development index.
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Rutana
IMC is initiating health programs in Rutana for some of the most marginalized people in the country. In one community we visited, almost 70 people were living in small shelters in southern Burundi. To step into their world is like stepping back thousands of years in time. These communities do not even have mud shacks to live in, but build basic round huts made out of straw. The men hunt small game in the nearby brush and the women must trek more than six miles to find clay to make basic pots that they sell for 20 cents.
We stopped at a nearby school to inspect the progress of a kitchen being built by IMC to provide supplementary feeding for school children. Many children are not able to attend school because they have to work. Providing food is one method to try to improve children’s health and increase the attendance rate.
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Muyinga/Kirundo
Malnourishment, particularly caused by lack of protein, brings on edema in the feet, legs and faces of sick children, along with ghastly swelling as fluid builds up under the skin, turning it purple and blistery. In the therapeutic feeding centers there are hundreds of children who are dying or would be dead if not for the essential nutrient-rich milk provided by IMC. Children are referred to TFCs from supplementary feeding clinics. They are admitted if their height–to-weight ratio is low enough to warrant 24-hour care. Crowded rooms hold more than 50 mothers, each with one or sometimes numerous malnourished children in need of immediate attention. There is little in the rooms, often only a cot and a mosquito net and the constant cries of hungry babies.
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Muramvya
One hour northeast of Bujumbura, high in the hills among vast banana plantations, liess Muramvya. We drove 4x4 trucks along potholed dirt roads to mobile health clinics that provide outreach to the community. Using illustrated poster boards, IMC community health workers explain critical topics such as malaria prevention, sanitation and nutrition. Due to the high illiteracy rate, drawings and face-to-face interaction are the most effective ways to convey this information. A small mud hut houses a clinic where people can receive consultation and vaccinations. A line of brightly dressed mothers and infants extends far along the road; it will take most of the day for patients to be seen, so everyone waits patiently.
I was struck by how supportive the community is of IMC’s work. Our truck became stuck while trying to cross the dirt road.
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Traveling in Burundi
Boys as young as five years old herd goats and cows by the side of the road. They are alone, working to help support their families instead of attending school. Everywhere you go you see people working in the fields. It seems as though every inch of the land is used. Something is planted every few feet on the side of the road. There are some cash crops like teas and coffee, but most of the land is used for subsistence agriculture. As we drive by, children reach out with stretched fingers and pleading eyes, hoping for money or something to eat.
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