Dorian2
Well-Known Member
I'll just say. Our family had no clue who we were supporting until the outfit sent us details on Naab on a quarterly basis. They also included a breakdown of what services the money was going toward, such as the previously mentioned infrastructure of the town, how education funds were spent, where those funds were going to, and general pictures of the individual who were committed to help along with her community. There was also letters written between my own "child of privilege", being white and all, and Naab regarding Christmas, graduation, and generally how her family was coping on a daily basis. Especially considering her Father had died when she was the same age as our own blood.I'm just saying - if someone in the west African Bambuti tribe was looking through a brochure of white kids deciding which one to sponsor to be more like the Bambudi people, I would find that desire to be very STRANGE
If you wish to look at this as some sort of strange desire, that's on you and your conscience dude. I'm clear in thought and process.
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