Afro-Caribbean Manitobans mark decade of giving back to homelands

Advertisement

Advertise with us

At any given time, the basement of Uche Nwankwo’s house has a stockpile of hundreds of computers and other supplies ready for shipping.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Monthly Digital Subscription

$4.75 per week*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Continue

*Billed as $19.00 plus GST every four weeks. Cancel anytime.

At any given time, the basement of Uche Nwankwo’s house has a stockpile of hundreds of computers and other supplies ready for shipping.

They’re not for sale, however.

Over the past decade, Nwankwo has been collecting donated items which he regularly sends to Africa as part of his efforts to improve teaching and learning experience in his birth continent.

SUPPLIED

Uche Nwankwo (fourth from left) with books and study materials being donated to a school in Nigeria.

Nwankwo has lived in Canada since 2008, and is a politician and university lecturer based in Winnipeg. As a child, he attended primary school in Imo State, Nigeria.

“Whenever I go back, I tell them that without this primary school, I wouldn’t have gone to the university; and without the university education, I wouldn’t have had the chance to travel to come to a place like Canada,” Nwankwo said. “So, for me, education remains the key and the tool to reduce socioeconomic inequality.”

Since 2013, Nwankwo has donated thousands of books — sourced from colleagues at local universities — as well as computers, journals, medical supplies, and electronics to colleges and higher institutions of learning.

Within Nigeria, the resources have been distributed through a collaboration with Changing Rural World e.V. Inc. and  International Health Overseas Project Education Canada (HOPE), an organization of retired nurses, doctors and medical practitioners. While the items are donated, the communities are responsible for paying shipping and duty fees.

“I liaise with International HOPE and put them in touch with communities who are in need of medical supplies in Nigeria,” Nwankwo said. “The (communities) also have to guarantee that the supplies are not sold and the recipient hospitals must be public facilities and not private. Also, the supplies will prioritise women, children and the elderly.”

The donation arrangement has worked so well over the years, according to Nwankwo, several Nigerian organizations are on the wait list for more donations from Winnipeg.

Nwankwo is far from the only immigrant working to better living conditions in his country of origin.

Since 2015, medical equipment (worth a total of more than $4 million) has regularly made its way from Manitoba, via Montreal, to the Caribbean nations of Guyana, Grenada and St. Kitts and Nevis, as part of an initiative to sustain and support the health-care sectors of these countries.

The initiative is led by the Caribbean-Canada Heart Health Education, a not-for-profit Winnipeg-based organization that works in collaboration with the International Academy of Cardiovascular Sciences.

Kamta Roy Singh, president of CCHHE, arrived in Winnipeg in the winter of 1989 to take up a job as a cleaner and cashier at a local Tim Hortons. A young man from Guyana, he worked his way up to eventually owning four Tim Hortons franchises.

His personal experience motivated Singh to give back and, along with fellow native-Caribbeans based in Manitoba, he has made donations of hospital beds, wheelchairs, heart monitors, computer desks, oxygen tanks, oxygen tubes and numerous other items.

SUPPLIED

Nwankwo with members of International HOPE in Winnipeg overseeing a shipment of medical equipment on its way to Africa.

“We sometimes send people from here to be on the ground over there to receive these containers and see where they are delivered,” Singh said. “Recently, we donated to nine clinics (and) two hospitals, and it was amazing to see the appreciation of the people who receive these things.

“Some of the recipients of wheelchairs were 101- and 93-year-olds, who were so excited and told us that, ‘Now I can live for another 10 years.’”

The organization, Singh said, is now looking to extend its largesse to another Caribbean country: St. Lucia.

“St. Lucia General Hospital burned down and they are using the cricket stadium as a hospital, currently,” Singh said. “We have been communicating with them and seeing how to help them, as well.”

Part of the CCHHE’s funding for donations comes from an annual 18-hole golf tournament Singh said attracts sponsors and participants who donate to the cause. It also hosts an annual fundraiser event.

Combined, the organization raises $20,000 to $25,000 per year to buy and ship medical equipment.

This story was written for the Winnipeg Free Press Reader Bridge as part of a partnership with New Canadian Media.

fpcity@freepress.mb.ca

History

Updated on Wednesday, March 29, 2023 10:46 AM CDT: Tweaks references to number of books donated and universities involved in donation.

Report Error Submit a Tip

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Reader Bridge

LOAD MORE