Children’s Drawers in Ghana
Children’s Drawers in Ghana: An Illustrated Review of the Study
By A. S. Chabry
An American schoolteacher has a story about how he is able to draw his children about how the world was designed to see through. Yet it might seem strange at first. In the midst of a busy but warm summer day in June he will read, “For one day the sun will rise. No, all the rain has fallen. The earth has begun to shake.” His children will start their work on Tuesday morning and he will go to bed by sunrise the next morning in the morning. Children’s Drawers in Ghana
An anecdote from a very different place about the time he and his wife take a holiday in Ghana. The story begins in a small town known as Nairobi. A few months ago the owner of a nearby factory had been kidnapped and killed in a fire. An entire village was flattened. It would take several more years to rebuild, so the family was forced to return to where they came from. But before long, the family was back in the factory, and the next thing they knew when they came home they discovered that Nairobi had been completely ruined.
This story, as far as I know, never had a single family member leave the country. Instead, the family spent many days in the field where the factory was located until there was nothing the family could do but leave. It was the only way to get back to safety in their own country