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Inspired by Mother Teresa, Kenyan safari operator feeds 24,000 families
Safari operator Pankaj Shah would normally be showing tourists around his native Kenya. Instead, he is spearheading a volunteer effort to feed thousands of families left penniless due to the devasting coronavirus.
"One old woman told us she hadn't eaten for days - her sons had stopped supplying her because they have no work," he said, walking down a line of young men packing rice, flour, beans, and long-life milk into boxes.
Kenya reported its first case of the coronavirus on March 12. Schools closed the following week. Businesses shut, families left the capital, and the casual work sustaining the vast majority of urban Kenyans dried up.
PANKAJ SHAH
The government offered tax breaks - little help to those too poor to pay taxes. Newspapers called for "total lockdown," and forgotten families in the slums began to starve and to seethe.
"People were getting hungry and angry," Shah said.
Someone had to act, he decided, and he asked a couple of friends to pitch in. A local school, shuttered by the virus, offered their premises as headquarters.
Kenya's Asian community - officially recognized three years ago as the nation's 44th tribe - rallied round. They brought cheques or truckloads of food or vegetables planted for export and now deserted by the lack of flights. The operation has been going daily for three weeks.
Shah's volunteers, who call themselves Team Pankaj, have sent out over 24,000 hampers since setting up on March 22, each with enough food to last a family of five for two weeks. He is asking wealthy Kenyans to donate 4,000 Kenya shillings each ($40) to fund the hampers - about the cost of two pizzas and a bottle of wine.
"I just need half the rich people here to care enough to fund a hamper," he says impatiently.
Mary Wangui, a 29-year-old mother, helped by Shah's efforts, said she had been desperate. "You can't hug a child to sleep when they are hungry," she said.
Although Shah has never run any kind of aid operation before, he has a guiding spirit: Mother Teresa, whom he said he met more than three decades ago in Nairobi. A wheel spun off the Roman Catholic nun's ancient pickup truck and hit his new Mercedes, he said.
The accident brought an unlikely friendship between a "young, wild" businessman and the world-famous missionary, Mother Teresa who cared for the poor, he said. He volunteered with her for three months, he said, and adopted a baby girl from one of her orphanages.
"I think about what she would do," he says after the coronavirus hit. "That's the inspiration for the rest of my life." —Reuters