When we moved to Mozambique 7 years ago, we assumed that the
profits of our Sunshine Nut Company would be used to assist the work being done
at existing orphanages. But over the years, our experiences revealed to us that
children flourish and are better prepared for a successful adult life when
raised in the Mozambican community, in a family environment, and by one
full-time caretaker who loves them best of all. Thus the Sunshine House concept
was created. We buy a house, fix it up, move in everything a family will need
to live, and then place a caretaker (a widow or abandoned woman) with 3-4
orphaned or vulnerable children.
When I was back in the US visiting at my daughter, Cassie’s,
house, she got me totally hooked on the TV series Fixer Upper. Well, let me say
that Chip and Joanna Gaines have got nothing on me! I would love to see them
come to Mozambique and fix up a house for our Sunshine families. Now that would
be an episode to watch!
First, we go out into a designated area and look for a house. We
have three main requirements…it must have two bedrooms, water, and electric.
Sounds like an easy thing to find. Not! I still find it shocking how few
families in Mozambican communities have water and electric. Electric and water
hook ups are a must for us to purchase a house. We learned the hard way with
our first house that one can wait weeks and even months for the water or
electric company to come. It is not something we ever want to endure again!
Our search for a house in our price range with these three
requirements took months to complete. Yet a house was found and the bargaining
process began. After repeated offers and counteroffers, we agreed on a purchase
price with the owner of the house in which we were interested. The actual
purchase of the home is the most simple part of this whole process. It is a
cash deal, which requires repeated trips to the ATM machine. It simply involves
a meeting of the owner, the buyer, and the local chefe (community leader). The
contract is a hand written piece of paper that simply says, “The buyer,
Sunshine Approach Foundation, is purchasing the home belonging to XXX for the
price of $$$ and is witnessed by the chefe, XXX.” All three parties sign and
the deal is done. The house was ours.
It is at this point that I get to see the house for the first
time. Before this, I cannot show my face because I am a foreigner or the price
will double. I went to see the house with my colleague, Delcio. We made a list
of all that would need to be done before anyone could live there. And then…the
work began.
The first job was to replace the broken front door and to add a
door for the room that would be the kitchen. Having good solid doors would be a
deterrent to burglars. A carpenter was hired for this job as well as to repair
the wooden windows that were still usable. Now that our house would be
protected, we moved forward.
Our house did have electric, but the lines were tacked on the
outside of the walls. This is not a safe situation for children. So we hired
Alberto, a former Sunshine Nut employee who went to school and studied
electrical engineering. His job was to hack channels into the cement walls and
to run the lines of wiring to all the lights, outlets, and switches. This is
the most destructive part of the process. It is during this time that I stay
away because it is so disturbing to see the house literally torn apart. Alberto
dug the channels and installed all the wiring in the walls, hung new lights
from the ceiling, put in switches on the walls for the lights, new outlets for
the plugs, and 4 temporary outdoor lights to provide lighting at night. When he was done,
it looked like Armageddon!
This is when we called in the pedreiro- a mason. He cemented all
of the dug out channels in the walls. He also replaced the air vents in each room.
Meanwhile, another pedreiro replastered the back wall of the house, which was decaying, and he put in 4
new metal windows purchased at the local market to replace wooden ones that
were rotten.
A third pedreiro was hired to make a cement walkway from the front veranda,
around the side of the house, and to the bathroom which is located out behind
the house.
In came our plumber, Lorinho. Lorinho’s job was to install a sink
in the kitchen, connect it to the water supply, and install the tubes to let it
drain out into a fossa (a pit) in the front yard.
For the fossa, we hired a
local man to dig a hole that was as deep as he was tall. The pedreiro was
called back in to line it with cement blocks, and we let it sit to dry out
before putting on the cement lid. Unfortunately for us, a huge rainstorm caused
it to fill again with mud. So it was dug out again and more layers of cement
blocks were laid to raise the height of the fossa.
Delcio hung curtain rods and I added the
curtains. We were now ready to move in furniture. In came beds, mattresses,
mosquito nets, a wicker living room set and TV, table, chairs, stove, and a
refrigerator. We added pots, pans, plates, cups, cutlery, bed linens, towels,
and a hundred other of those little things you need in a home.
Angelica is
getting to know the neighbors and learning where in her area to buy the things
she will need. We check in on her each day to make sure she is adjusting well.
She is very excited to receive children. This will come next. We are waiting
for the final approval to register our foundation with the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs. We can then work with the Social Action branch of the government to
identify and place orphaned children. We have been told that we will receive
this approval in the coming week- a welcome notification after a grueling and
frustrating year and a half run-around registration process.
So stay tuned for our big announcement!
BEFORE AND AFTER PHOTOS...
After |
Tia Angelica's Bedroom Before |
After |
Dining Area Before |
After |
Kitchen Before |
After |
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