This little Zaye was malnourished
last year but has since graduated from Come Eat at My Table
(CEAMT)
A fresh skull found lying on the ground.
Kids crowd around our volunteers - especially
when they have a camera!
These CHA's just graduated from
their eight month training program. Equip has trained over
2000 CHA's throughout Liberia.
CHA's teach valuable lessons to the kids
like how to properly wash your hands. Something simple like
this makes such a difference in preventing the spread of diseases.
The Equip vehicle has to stop here and staff
must cross this river by canoe.
Volunteer Valri Howg visiting the
malnourished children in Wuo's Town.
A regular meal for CEAMT includes the 3 types
of food - body building (protein), protective (vegetables),
and energy (carbohydrates).
Another group of CHA's happy and proud to
be receiving their certificate of graduation. The CHA's are
looked up to in the communities.
A mortar destroyed our roof in
Monrovia during the fighting.
The Community Health Ambassadors (CHAs) work
right in their own communities to teach their people needed
health care.
Our Equip sign in Ganta shot up. This gives
an idea of how much shooting really occurred. Almost all buildings,
vehicles, and signs had this many bullet holes in them.
Sarah Card traverses the rough
roads helping to get our vehicle out of a tough situation.
Ganta fell in March 2003. Almost every building
was destroyed when the rebel soldiers came to town.