Yusuf Sumani
It never ceases to amaze us
the number of inspirational stories we continue to find here in Malawi. We have become familiar with the stories coming
out of the red brick huts and thatch-roofed homes that dot Malawi’s rural villages. Other times, however, a truly heartwarming
story is found right on the streets of Mzuzu, Malawi‘s third largest city and the headquarters of Africa Bags.
Such is the story of Yusuf Sumani , whom we found on the edge of the parking lot for our office. Yusuf was born
in 1966 in southern Malawi, near a town called Mangochi. He was born with severely deformed feet. For his entire life,
Yusuf has been unable to walk and has been forced to crawl on the ground, often moving less than one or two blocks in an hour.
Still, Yusuf managed to move to Kasungu, a town near Mzuzu. There he married and fathered two daughters and one
son. The two daughters have grown up and are now married, raising their own families. Yusuf’s son has successfully
passed his primary school exams and is now studying at secondary school as a Form 1 (9th Grade) student. Despite his
disability, Yusuf had up to this point managed to feed his family by farming. Yusuf would sell maize and goats to pay
for fertilizer and farm labor. For many years, Yusuf and his family managed to get by like this. With his
son’s success in school, Yusuf has found himself unable to meet the cost of school fees. Secondary school in Malawi
is not free, and costs K19500 ($130) per year. For any Malawian, $130 not easy to come by. For Yusuf, who is living
with a disability and unable to walk, the cost of his son’s education is nearly impossible. Determined to get
his son educated, Yusuf has come to Mzuzu to sit on the street and ask for assistance. When he told us he uses the money
to buy clothes and bicycle parts for a shop he is starting back in Kasungu, were we both surprised and skeptical. Having
heard a lot of stories from “beggars”, it is often hard to distinguish fact from fiction. When he produced
the receipts we were truly amazed. Yusuf needs to invest K28,250 ($188.33) to even start his business and pay for his
son’s education.. Already he has invested K11,120 ($74.13), leaving himself K17,130 ($114.20) short of the bare
minimum to open his shop. We hope that with the help of our friends around the globe, Yusuf can far exceed that amount,
invest in his business, and see that his son gets properly educated.
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