Saturday, November 2, 2019

A mind blowing level of productivity

When my child, Scratch, was nearly nothing, his preferred book was Richard Scarry's What Do Individuals Do Throughout the Day? It was an image book with delineations that indicated how development laborers, ranchers, firemen, and specialists kept Busytown running.

The camp — or arrangement of around 30 camps — where the outcasts live looks like Busytown. Throughout the day, people work, filling packs with sand and bond that they use to support sponsor a child slopes and cutting into the land with scoops to make waste trench, streets, extensions, and pathways. I have never observed such enterprising nature in a displaced person camp.



World Vision pays them a reasonable compensation to take a shot at these ventures and outfits them with orange vests. The cash is little — enough to purchase a chicken or some new organic product — however the work takes a feeling of pride back to lives that have been ransacked of to such an extent.

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