Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

MUM’S LIFE-CHANGING LESSON FOR HER KIDS

She takes ‘poor’ girls to see poverty in Uganda

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A MUM who was tired of her children thinking of themselves as poor took them on a trip to Uganda – and it “blew their minds”.

Aid worker Ziz York paid to have her two girls Nia, nine, and eight-year-old Robyn join her on a work visit so they could witness real poverty.

She said: “Before we went to Uganda, my daughters had been complainin­g, ‘Oh, we’re so poor’ because they’d seen friends get holidays to Disney World or getting an Xbox for their birthdays.

“I said, ‘You have a roof over your head, we can buy pretty much what we want in a supermarke­t, you have freedom of movement, we are in the top 5% richest in the world’.” But the girls were not convinced, pointing out they don’t have “a mansion or servants”.

So their mum showed them the conditions faced by some in the east Africa nation. She said: “We do live in a suburban bubble, so Uganda was mind-blowing for them.

“I think the biggest eye-opener for them was the lack of clothing.

“They were seeing children that were a quarter dressed because their clothes were that ragged.

“They saw the lack of basic supplies we take for granted.

“The Ugandan kids didn’t have pens, paper, underwear – a lot didn’t have shoes. There were no toys.”

Nia and Robyn did not witness the malnutriti­on suffered by some children in the country, or those dying from malaria, but Ziz said they saw enough to understand why Uganda needs help.

She added: “I wish more British people could get that perspectiv­e.”

The mum, of Inverness, works for UK charity Teams4u whose aims include educating people in Uganda about sexual health and family planning.

Health workers offering birth control have been met by men with machetes. Teams4u aims to teach girls about periods so they are not too ashamed to go to school. Periods are seen by many there as a “curse”.

One in four women in the nation has a baby by the age of 19 and child marriage is “rampant”, according to the United Nations. There is also a high risk of contractin­g HIV.

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 ??  ?? EYE-OPENER Nia, centre, with kids in Uganda
EYE-OPENER Nia, centre, with kids in Uganda
 ??  ?? VISIT Robyn meets kids on trip
VISIT Robyn meets kids on trip
 ??  ?? MISSION Aid worker Ziz, front
MISSION Aid worker Ziz, front

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