Help The Boguhe Family
This charity's goal is to raise the funds to provide crucial services to Ivorian refugee, friend, and engineering student Bouazo Boguhé and his two sons. These funds will support his struggling family with food, educational tools and opportunities, financing for English courses, and ultimately relocation to a more secure city with greater employment opportunities. All funds will be managed by both Bouazo and me, Alan Smith, in order to ensure that they are used in the most effective manner to support the Boguhé family.
Please reconsider the fleeting satisfaction of
a $30 restaurant meal and contemplate the long-lasting comfort of philanthropy.
Any support will go towards a great cause to better a hard-working man's
pursuit of dignity, comfort, and opportunity.
Bouazo (Boo-a-z-oh) and his two sons, Gnolou
(knoll-oo) and Yao (Yow-oh), make up the Boguhé (Bow-g-you-ay) family - a
strong, cohesive, intelligent and unfortunate family that I am grateful to
have met. I first met Bouazo during a graduate engineering class at the
University at Buffalo and quickly became enamored by his determination to
better his family in spite of his disastrous socio-economic situation.
Photos:
A farewell dinner the eve of my departure from Buffalo. (From left to right: myself, Yao, Gnolou, the head of the local Boys and Girls Club chapter, and Bouazo)
Chicago St.
Buffalo, the infamous neighborhood of the Boguhé family
Bouazo's daily
commute between Chicago St. and the UB North Campus.
Background:
An immigrant from the Ivory Coast, he escaped its 2002 civil war in pursuit of
a better life in the United States. He previously held the uncommon and
extraordinary position as an educator in Electromechanical Systems and Higher
Education at the University of Abidjan, a school now shut down due to
continuing violence plaguing the country. During the first few years in NYC,
Bouazo worked as a gas station attendant until receiving a debilitating
work-related back injury preventing him from continuing his employment.
Because education and academia was his professional specialty, he moved to
Western New York to continue his education in the hopes of receiving an
accredited American degree. It was during this time that his sons were forced
to immigrate to the United States due to escalating violence during the 2010
Ivorian Presidential Elections leading to the country's second civil war. Because
of his aptitude in mathematics at the Erie County College, he received an
acceptance to the University at Buffalo where he is currently struggling to
finish a Masters in Mechanical Engineering.
This is when I had the fortune of recognizing the French accent of a
middle-aged man sitting behind me during one of my 2012 fall semester courses.
I still had fond memories of a year-long study abroad in France and took the
opportunity to practice my French "“ his native language. I quickly realized,
though, that Bouazo was neck-deep in difficult economic times and struggling to
understand a confusing foreign system based on unfamiliar technologies. Having
missed the orientation due to parenting obligations, he was completely unaware
of the online system used by professors to assign homework, hand out online
notes, and provide class updates. In addition, it was also clear that his
English skills were not good enough to understand much of the material being
taught in class. Without knowledge of online notes or assigned homework, he was
struggling to receive a passing grade.
Although Bouazo had worked in a University setting for over a decade, the
reality of limited technologies available to African universities limited his
exposure to computers, powerful software, and the internet. After familiarizing
myself with his difficult financial situation, I decided to purchase for him a
cheap laptop from Newegg.com and give him some introductory courses in MATLAB,
computational programming software required to complete most homework
assignments. This small deed permitted him to work on assignments from home "“ a
grueling 90+ minute commute from the UB campus.
Prior to receiving this computer, he spent many full nights toiling to learn to
use library computers and their tools. Because of his parental obligations and
the dangerous neighborhood where he lives, his children were often forced to
stay with him throughout the night after the public transportation system
closed down. On one occasion, a concerned citizen reported his children's
situation to the Department of Child Services believing that he was incapable
of supporting their needs.
Once again, the Boguhé family lives in abject poverty in the
projects of Buffalo, the third poorest city in the United States. I once
attempted to purchase an internet plan for their apartment only to realize that
no providers actually offer service to his neighborhood "“ a problem I never
knew existed in this country. Below is a list of some of the socio-economic
conditions which plague the family.
· Public housing's economic and social limitations
1.
There is no
available internet service in or around his apartment which limits his ability
to stay connected to school or access related materials.
2.
Bouazo has
been attacked on several instances by gang members as he walked home from
school.
3.
Frequent
violence requires his children to be accompanied at all times. There are even
bullet-holes on the apartment's exterior siding.
4.
The public
housing projects are of shoddy construction and he has frequently laughed about
how when it snows outside, it also "snows inside."
5.
His apartment
recently suffered a break-in resulting in the loss of two borrowed net-books
and a flash-drive containing all of his personal documents. For the first time
in the US, he is concerned for his safety even at home.
6.
He is reliant
on old appliances including a refrigerator that once stopped working, spoiling
a 2-month supply of groceries.
· Reliance on public
transportation (NFTA)
1.
His daily
trip to school involves a walk to the bus stop, a bus to a subway station, a
train to the children's school, another train to the UB South Campus, and
finally another bus to the UB North Campus. This trip takes about 90 minutes on
a quick day and places limitations on when he has access to the internet and
other school services.
2.
The NFTA
closes at 12:30am most days requiring him to leave the library at 11:30pm if he
wants to sleep at home.
3.
While still
living in Buffalo, I frequently picked up his children from the Boys and Girls
Club. Unfortunately this after-school organization decided to no longer support
his children due to his inability to pick them up before closing.
· Financial Hardship
1.
Bouazo's income
comes from high-interest loans and a meager 500 dollars/month salary earned
through AmeriCorps, a government organization that pays less than minimum wage
for community service outreach.
2.
The
family is ineligible for food stamps or other government aid due to
their immigration status. Although they all have green cards, their
sponsor, Bouazo's brother, is in similar financial straights in NYC.
3. The family typically only purchases groceries once every two months in
order to buy in bulk. They typically only eat 2 meals per day at best.
4.
Because of
his poor credit, he in unable to open a bank account providing many common services that come
from such basic "luxuries".
· Unfamiliarity with many technologies/resources that most take for granted
1.
Relating to
trivial tasks, It takes practice and familiarity to effectively use Google for
efficient searches
2.
MATLAB is
still one of his biggest academic obstacles although he has come a long way
since 2012.
3.
His
unfamiliarity with the US society along with the other hardships has frequently
resulted in poor grades and wasted opportunities.
· Medical Conditions (and costs), language limitations, and parenting obligations prevent finding employment
1.
Even working
conditions requiring standing for long periods of time are not possible.
Unfortunately, the insurance company paying out workers compensation has
canceled his benefits.
2.
Work-study
positions at the university are unavailable to him
3.
His English
language limitations prevent him from excelling in interviews or even becoming
a STEM tutor.
4.
Every time
one of his children goes to the ER for a minor medical condition, he is the recipient
of a large on often-unpayable bill.
· High-interest loans
1.
I am not
up-to-date on his debt situation, but I presume that he has about 20,000
dollars in school loans through his education at the University at Buffalo and Erie Community College.
Of course, the above conditions only highlight the most significant obstacles
to the success of the Boguhé family. Related to this economic plight is a
particularly important subject - the future opportunities of Yao and
Gnolou, respectively 9 and 13 year old. Each has limited access to not only
food and sleep, but also a decent education away from the horrors of the
inner-city Buffalo school system. Both are clearly very intelligent and contain
the innocence and curiosity that all children are born with. I have become a
mentor to their eyes and hope to provide them with the educational materials,
tools, and toys which they have not had the fortune of growing up with. They
deserve the right to a successful future if they so desire.
Unfortunately for the Boguhé family, I was offered
a Ph.D. position in 2013 at the University of Colorado and thus moved 2500 km
to the southwest. The move meant that I could no longer serve as transportation
to the family nor could I provide the direct support that comes with physical
contact. It was difficult to see the heart-break of Yao and Gnolou as we parted
after our last meal.