Elizabeth High School in Enugu. There, the day starts with 5 am exercise
and prayer, and continues with a 12-subject course load. There’s no
help from mum on homework or washing clothes, either.
I’m concerned, because there comes a time when the storm is going to hit
you, and if you never had that to fall back on you’re just going to
fall apart,” Evans Nwankwo, the father, said. “I strongly believe that
because it’s been important in my own development.”
family was well off. Then, the Nigerian civil war broke out and they
were running for safety and scrambling for food, and his father was
killed.
Cincinnati probably know Nwankwo’s work – his construction company is
the go-to contractor that has worked on sites including Fountain Square,
the Freedom Center and Washington Park.
As the boys were getting ready to go, things in Africa were looking
bad. The Ebola outbreak was making headlines, as were attacks by the
terrorist group Boko Haram on schools in northern Nigeria.
The boys had other concerns.
studies, basic necessities like water required work to obtain.
“It was kind of eye-opening to see how much you actually have to work
to get a simple bucket of water, and how you actually have to use your
own strength to carry it back and forth,” Noble said. “And it’s actually
pretty tough to hand-wash your clothes with that amount of water. You
have to really manage it.”
with… Here you can just turn on the tap and there’ll be water flowing
like it’s nothing,” Evan said. “There, you’ll, be struggling for it.
Sometimes we would go without water for a couple of days.”
Since returning, their dad said he’s already seen a change in his boys.
“I feel that the experience is one that will live with them forever,
and they will be forever changed – maybe not on the immediate, but long
term.”
appreciate the shower, so I don’t have to use a bucket of water in a
bowl,” Noble said. “I appreciate my electronics. I appreciate my parents
a lot more because I realise how much – especially my dad – I really
realise how much he had to do to get here.”
“He’s taught me a lot, and he’s made me go through a lot to make me a
better person, to make me a person that can just endure,” Evan said.
put aside some money so any future grandchildren can also spend a year
in Nigeria.
