Seeing What I Have Never Seen
Malawi Healthcare, Medical Shipments & DistributionA Great Day For Everyone
They came that day from all corners of Salima District in eastern Malawi. It was not only a big day for those with mobility problems, but it was a big day for the blind, albinos, the deaf, the dumb and any other disability known to man kind, including even the elderly and the orphans who were present to receive from Kuthandiza Osayenda Disability Outreach (KODO) the various items the Malawi Project and its supporters had recently sent to Malawi. After the shipment arrived KODO organized the ceremony, which was presided over by the District Commissioner, in order to give the much-needed humanitarian aid to these most needy citizens in the district. The items, which ranged from beddings, clothes, shoes, wheelchairs, crutches, walking sticks, frames, shower seats, toilet-seats, vegetable soup, and kitchen items, were freely donated to these people. It was a joyful day to see happy people receiving things some of them have never used before in their lives.
Now I Can See Salima
"To day I can now move around Salima Town to all of the places I have never seen, since the day of my birth, because of mobility problems. Now that I have this wheelchair, I need to see this town," says Mr. Husen Selemani as he pulls away in his wheelchair carrying his bag packed with other items heading for Salima Town.
Four hundred (400) people benefited from the shipment of supplies on this day alone, with so many of them having multiple disabilities, i.e. no legs, no arms, blind, dumb and deaf in one person.















notes how it appeares "the wheelchairs look like they are standing at attention." He and the Medical Director for the Malawi Project, Suzi Stephens are making an appraisal of supplies that will soon be making their way to the Kachere Orthopedic Rehabilitation Hospital in
According to G. Chimatiro, the Administrator of the center, "Treating patients with so many needs that we cannot meet is always tough. The trailer of supplies that have been donated came at the right time."
But this day would not be like other days and unfortunately he was caught up in an accident when a pot of boiling water tipped over his back and splashed onto his left upper back. The burns were severe. Burns such as this take the lives of many children in Malawi as they fall around the cooking pots that stand unguarded around most of the houses. At four years of age little Mackson Kapeni would not have known the full extent of the danger until it was too late.
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Mavuto was born with both legs, and was able to walk until 1972. On the dreadful morning of 18th April 1972, Mavuto was crossing the road at the Mponela Trading Centre. A speeding car was approaching from the north. Unfortunately for Mavuto as he was trying to cross the road he stumbled and fell to the ground on the highway. The driver could not stop and he ran over Mavuto’s legs. From this accident he lost the use of both of his legs. From that moment onward Mavuto was destined to crawl on the ground like some sort of pitiful animal. 