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Beneficiaries’ story

My name is Deborah IMANISHIMWE, I am 18. my disability is about my light arm. My light arm does not function and I use my left one. I really thank God for the way he protected me and my house. Ni Uwacu Foundation became my second family because it’s where I have brothers and sisters. Through Ni Uwacu Program I got my joy which didn’t find before being Ni Uwacu member.

It was very difficult to me to go to school not because of limited financial means but the way my family treated me. They used to tell me that I am nothing and I can’t study because even if I finish my schools I can do nothing. Ni Uwacu helped my parents to understand that my disability can’t stop me being an important person among the society. Through Ni Uwacu teachings my parents understood that God himself created me as I am for Purpose. God can use me as I am for his glory.

Dan

Dan BIRORI

My name is Dan. I was born in 2015, in a small village where life is hard and food is never guaranteed. I live with both my parents, and even though we don’t have much, they love me deeply.
I was born with a hearing and speech disability. I don’t speak, and I don’t hear—but I see, I feel, and I believe.

I go to a public school. I’m in Primary Three. My teachers try their best, but the school doesn’t have the tools to help me learn the way I need to. I often sit quietly, watching others answer questions I cannot hear, reading words I cannot pronounce. Learning is hard. Sometimes, it feels impossible.

But I believe in God. I believe He can make me strong. I believe He can help me become someone important—someone who can change things, not just for myself, but for others like me.

I dream of becoming a great man one day. I don’t know what kind of man yet—but I know I want to be someone who matters.

And I have simple joys too. When I get to eat meat and fries, I feel like the happiest boy in the world. It doesn’t happen often, but when it does, I smile with my whole heart.

I may not speak with words, but I speak with hope. I may not hear the world, but I feel its weight—and I carry it with faith.

Sandrine UWABATESI

My name is Sandrine. I was born in 2010, without legs. Not even one. My body came into this world incomplete—but my soul came full of fire

I don’t remember ever walking. I don’t know what it feels like to run, to jump, or to dance. But I know what it feels like to be left behind. I know what it feels like to be unwanted.

My parents couldn’t accept me. They said I was a curse. They turned away from me when I needed them most. I was just a child—fragile, voiceless, and broken in their eyes.

So my grandmother took me in. She’s the only person who saw me as a blessing. She cannot walk either. Her legs stopped working years ago, but her heart never did. We live together in a small, crumbling house. No electricity. No running water. No food unless someone helps us. But we have each other. And we have faith.

I use a small, rusted wheelchair to move around. It’s not easy. The roads are rough, the hills are steep, and sometimes I fall. But I get back up. Not with legs—but with a will chair.

I go to school. I’m in Senior One. I love learning. I love sitting in class and imagining a future where I’m not just surviving—but helping others. I want to be a nurse. I want to care for people who feel forgotten, like me and my grandmother.
School is hard. There are stairs I cannot climb. Toilets I cannot reach. Teachers who don’t know how to teach someone like me. But I keep showing up. Every day. Because I believe that education is my way out—not just for me, but for others who come after me.

Sometimes I cry. Not because I’m weak—but because I’m tired. Tired of being looked at with pity. Tired of being treated like I don’t belong. But then I remember who I am. I am Sandrine. I am strong. I am worthy. I am here.

I may not have legs, but I have dreams. I may not have parents, but I have love. I may not have much, but I have a purpose—and that purpose keeps me alive.

Obed

Obed IRADUKUNDA

Owen

Owen NTWARI KAMANZI

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Clemence

Clemence UWUMUKIZA

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Liliane

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