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In January last year, Nakurka, her husband and their eight children were hoping rain would arrive and break the drought in Kenya’s Turkana region.

In March, however, Nakurka lost her husband and seven-year-old son, and the worst drought in years showed no sign of abating.

“This drought has been the worst experience in my life,” Nakurka says.

Drought has always been a threat for families in Turkana. Sharing a border with South Sudan, Ethiopia and Uganda, the region is harsh and unyielding.

Yet historically, while rainfall patterns are among the lowest in the country, the annual short and long rains have been mostly reliable, ensuring there is just enough water to survive the difficult conditions.

However, this changed in recent years. Drought in 2014, followed by poor and below average rates of rainfall in 2015 and 2016 has led to the critical situation in the region today. What was once a 10-year cycle of drought in Kenya, now appears to be occurring every other year.

Nakurka’s family started getting desperate in February last year. Her husband gathered some friends and their livestock, and left in search of greener pastures on the Ethiopian border.

Three weeks later Nakurka learnt he had been killed.

As she grieved her husband’s death, the conditions in Turkana worsened. Food became so scarce that many people in Turkana resorted to eating poisonous fruits (locally known as sorich), which are fatal if they’re not carefully prepared.

“If you don’t boil them well for over 12 hours, you can die,” Nakurka says.

“We would eat at night before going to bed. You know if you don’t eat something before you sleep, then it becomes impossible to sleep.

But the food was not enough for Nakurka’s seven-year-old son, who was severely malnourished when he died a month after his father.

Nakurka believes all eight of her children would have died without ChildFund’s Australian donors, who helped provide food, water and essential healthcare to struggling families.

 

Actress and ChildFund Ambassador Danielle Cormack has had her fair share of nerves especially on an opening night of a play or a movie premiere. But as she drove through the small villages of remote Uganda on a recent trip she was struck by an unexpected jolt of nerves.

“It was a mixture of anxiety, excitement and anticipation,” she says.

For the last 13 years, Danielle waited for this moment, the first face-to-face meeting with her sponsored child Akullu. This is Danielle’s story.

“I had dreamed of meeting her for 13 years, and finally there she was…”

As Danielle’s vehicle made the final turn towards Akullu’s tiny village, she spotted a jubilant group of women waving branches and cheering. At the front of the pack was the 18-year-old Danielle travelled across the world to see.

“I had dreamed of meeting her for 13 years,  and finally there she was standing in front of me,” Danielle says.

“I’ve seen her grow up through her letters.”

“I’ve seen her grow up through her letters. When I first started sponsoring Akullu, her grandfather was corresponding with me on her behalf as Akullu was only a little girl. Now she’s grown into this incredible young woman.”

Akullu was just five years old when Danielle started sponsoring her. Girls like Akullu in regional parts of Uganda face serious hurdles, including a lack of access to education, healthcare and nutritious food.

Danielle’s sponsorship has helped improve Akullu’s life and supported investments that will benefit her community for years to come. Akullu’s extended family and other people from her village gathered around to meet Danielle and thank her for her support.