BY EDMUND SANDERS
But Abdulkhadir Wasuge has devoted his life to making sure his corner of
As he does each year, the father of eight recently made the rounds in Jowhar, 60 miles north of the capital city of
His Shabelle Educational Umbrella, a de facto school board, is largely responsible for rebuilding the region's education system, which has grown from a single schoolroom with 40 students in 1993 to ' schools and 10,000 students today.
"Education is the light," said Wasuge, 43. "I want to make sure young people don't miss out." He attributed his motivation to overcoming personal challenges as a child, when a bout with polio at age 5 left him without use of his legs.
"Lack of education is just another kind of handicap," he said. Much of the time he gets around town on a specially built four-wheel motorbike or in a wheelchair. But often he walks on his hands, protected by a pair of well-worn sandals, and using a powerful upper body to go up steps and climb into cars without assistance.
Aid groups say his efforts have pushed the primary school enrollment rate to 24 percent in the Middle Shabelle region, which includes Jowhar. Though still relatively low, that's the highest in southern
"He's someone who never gets tired of working for what he's committed to," said Marian Abkow, education manager in the Jowhar office of the UN Children's Fund, or UNICEF.
Wasuge said he got involved after losing his job as an accountant for the local sugar factory, which closed down in 1990 amid
Wasuge began teaching math when a local primary school reopened in 1993. In the ensuing years, he helped to form the umbrella group, which established minimum academic standards, recruited teachers and raised money from foreign aid groups and local charities.
Mindful of the challenges he sometimes faced in school, Wasuge launched a special class for disabled students, which he taught under a tree until funding was obtained to build a classroom. He added adult-education for the many adults who missed the chance to attend school.
The school system survives today on student fees of about $1 per month. Humanitarian groups help and the