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Buduburam Refugee Camp |
We drove along the main road linking Accra to Takoradi and the Cote D'Ivoire border, heading towards the Liberian refugee camp in the town of Buduburam. Traffic was busy, but far from gridlock, and generally we made good time along the way. We'd probably arrive at the camp in about an hour. Much of the second half of the trip left us caught in a cloud of gravel and dust, as the road was being repaved, forcing us to follow a dirt track while construction continued.
Approaching 2pm, we found ourselves in a stretch of road lined with tightly packed stalls selling goods of all imaginable shapes and sizes. Vendors on foot went from car to car, hawking cases of toilet paper, freshly peeled pineapples and a spectrum of snacks. David pulled over for a moment and motioned to one young woman, who was balancing a pyramid of cookie boxes and peanut bags in a wide metal tray on her head. David placed his order, speaking to her in Akan, and she nonchalantly tipped her head, almost as if to make a facial gesture; a single pack of peanuts tumbled from the tray. She didn't even break eye contact with David; the peanuts landed right in her hand, ready to pass it through the window for a couple of crumpled cedi notes.
A few minutes later we arrived at the entrance to the camp. From the outside, it looked almost like we were entering the same neighborhood as my guesthouse. There was a dirt road sloping up a small hill, past several rows of cement huts and shops. Two UN High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR) vehicles left the entrance as we pulled in; David parked outside the UNHCR office so we could figure out where to go next.
A young African man in a UNHCR t-shirt came up to us to see if we needed any help. I told him we were there to meet a group of volunteers and Liberian NGO workers for a tour of the camp. At first he seemed to have no idea whom we were looking for, but eventually he offered to jump in the back of the truck and lead us to the right place.
We drove deeper and deeper into the camp. The further we went, the more surprised I became. To be honest, I had no particular expectation of what the camp would look like. What I found was a hotbed of human commotion - countless shops, children playing soccer, young men playing backgammon, women getting their hair done. This was a vibrant and surprisingly cheerful place. I wondered what other surprises might be around the corner.
Soon we reached a building with a small sign marking it as the volunteer headquarters. I went inside and introduced myself to an international group of young people, none of whom seemed to be expecting me. I then pulled out the only name I could recall from the flutter of emails over the last week.
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Jeremiah, one of my hosts at the refugee camp |
“Is Jeremiah here?” I asked. “He should be expecting me.”
“Sure, he's in the back,” an Asian American woman said. “You'll be able to find him there.”
I stepped into the room and found a young Liberian man hunched over a laptop. He was wearing a bright, white polo shirt, sporting closely cropped hair and a goatee.
“Andy!” Jeremiah greeted me, warmly. He shook my hand and gave me a hug, like an old friend. We talked for a moment about the drive from Accra, then planned our itinerary for the afternoon.
“How much time do you have?” he asked. “You must be very busy; if you can only spare 15 minutes….”
“I have as much time as you need,” I replied. “Even if it's an hour or more, whatever is best for you. David and I are not in a rush to return to Accra as I'm done with my appointments for the day.”
“Wonderful!” he replied. “Let's go outside and wait for Hisenburg to come, then we can walk around the camp.” Jeremiah was referring to Hisenberg Togba, founder of Movement for the Promotion of Gender Equality in Liberia (MOPGEL) and one of the camp's computer literacy coordinators. “I know Karl William would like to join us but he isn't available now - maybe we'll find him before you leave.”
Outside, Jeremiah introduced himself to David while I strolled around the block. A few buildings to the left, in a small courtyard, a group of children played a game reminiscent of marbles. At first I was hesitant to take their pictures, as I had been warned that the refugees were often not comfortable in front of the camera.
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Liberian Kung Fu Masters |
Soon, though, the kids made out my intentions, and immediately started to pose for pictures, striking the international pose of young boys everywhere — the kung fu pose. One of the boys started making karate-chop noises while repeating the word “Obruni! Obruni!” which means, to no surprise, “white man.” It seemed their little game was “let's attack the white boy,” but it was all in good fun, as I took pictures and called them Kung Fu Masters. Meanwhile, Hisenburg joined the group. He was wearing a beige gown reminiscent of the dishdashas I saw all over Oman, with a single pen in his left breast pocket.
The four of us began exploring the camp, Jeremiah taking the lead. I kept falling behind, eager to pause and snap pictures in every direction. There was so much activity: tight little alleyways leading past telephone centers, homes, snack shops, shoe stores. The wider avenues were busy with pedestrian traffic, as well as numerous bicycles and the occasional car.
When I caught up with the group, Jeremiah turned to me and said softly, “You probably know this, but some people are not comfortable having their picture taking. It makes them nervous.”
“Don't worry,” I said,” “I'll maintain my distance. And if I want to get a shot of a particular person, we'll ask them first. If they say no, then they say no.”
We reached another avenue and turned right, heading to another neighborhood. “So how many people live here?” I asked.
“More than 40,000,” Jeremiah explained. “It's about 42,000, to be precise…. The first group that came here was like 5,000 persons, and finally it just moved onto much bigger numbers. And it keeps growing.”
“And that was in 1990?” I asked,
“1990, yeah, the first batch, the first group,” he replied. “As the war continued in Liberia, more and more started coming to Ghana — and they are still coming.”
We reached a neighborhood that featured several churches. Each neighborhood, actually, seemed packed with churches, as well as shops and learning centers of various types. Before coming, I'd expected to see temporary shelters with corrugated roofs; instead, we found acre upon acre of cement and brick buildings, painted and well maintained.
“I'm really struck as we walk through here at how well established it is as a community, with the number of shops and businesses,” I remarked.
“The thing is that they have to make it on their own,” Jeremiah said. “All these things are done by themselves. The UNHCR could not help them — they had to take up their own thing, their own initiative. Many of these people rely on their own self-struggle. Some relatives in America and other parts of the world tend to chip in a bit, but that's not sufficient. So they rely on their initiative to really make it.”
We began talking about some of the education programs available in the camp. Some of the Liberians here are highly skilled workers, but are unable to get jobs in their fields outside of the camp as long as there are equally-skilled Ghanaians applying for the same job. Meanwhile, thousands of others in the camp have very limited skills, so they're often quite eager to enroll in courses ranging from basic literacy to computer training.
“What I'm saying is that we want literacy skills around to empower them, to do their own thing,” Jeremiah said. “Self businesses. Give them skills. And of course they can help themselves. Liberians are not really looking out for handouts. No - that's one thing I can tell everybody. They don't want handouts - they only want a push.”
“So they want to be self-sufficient,” I added.
“Self-sufficient,” Jeremiah repeated, gesturing to some of the buildings around us. “Extremely self-sufficient. And that's why you can see from these structures that these are people who are not just beggars. They're not just beggars. They want to do a lot of things. Everything you see - they did it on their own. Nobody helped them; they did it own their own.”
“And they're not prepared to beg,” Jeremiah reiterated, emotion building in his voice. “They're not prepared to beg, not at all…. Not prepared to beg….”
The four of us continued to stroll through the village, dodging children and puppies and chickens while the local adults went on with their daily business. I asked Jeremiah if he thought the situation was improving enough for people to consider going home.
“In Liberia it's still not ready for them to go home,” he explained. “I was in Liberia about a month ago, and there are still arms there. Why would these people go to Liberia when there are still arms there? Why would they go when they'd have nowhere to stay, no water for them? You can't let these guys go; they wouldn't go. And that's why the UNHCR voluntary repatriation process failed.”
“But I believe that only if we can empower them, they can do better when they go home,” he added. “All we need to do is empower them. They are absolutely not prepared to beg. They may be here in tattered clothes, but they are proud people, and they want to do it on their own. If only they can get a push, then they can perform wonders.”
We reached an open field in the middle of the camp that served as the main soccer field; to the right, one of the high schools was teaming with students.
“How many students go to school here in the camp?”
“More than 11,000,” Hisenburg said.
“11,000,” I repeated. “That's like some U.S. school districts.”
“Yes, there are many students here,” Hisenburg continued.
“And you're involved with computer training?” I asked.
“Yes,” he replied. “What we are doing now - you see, computers in Liberia, about 95% of the country isn't literate in terms of the computer. So what we're doing is training a group of volunteers who will go back to Liberia, and train others how to use them.”
“So it sounds like you're focusing not only on training people here, but making sure that people back home will have these skills as well,” I replied.
“Yes, so they'll be able to get a job in the market,” he said. “Today, if you don't have computer skills, it's difficult for you to get a job. So that's why our focus is to train Liberian refugees before returning back.”
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A student completes a Powerpoint Course at the refugee camp's computer center |
A few minutes later we reached the home of the Liberia IT and Computer Skills Enhancement Campaign, home to Hisenburg's training program. Inside, we found an unlit room with two rows of computers. On the left side of the room, several young Liberians worked hard on completing a PowerPoint training course. On the right side, a row of computers sat idle.
“We started here, we had 16 computers, at our own initiative,” Hisenburg explained. “As you can see, these ones are down. We started with programs Monday through Thursday, then Friday and Saturday were for the disabled and children ages 10 through 17. But because of the number of computers we have now - we have just eight that work - so we had to reduce the Friday and Saturday for the disabled and children to only Saturday. We started with two hours, but now because of the number of computers, we only offer one hour in order to accommodate all of those wanting to take classes.”
“Are you currently searching for donations?”
“Yes, we are looking for donations, contacting people for donations, but we have yet to find any donations. We have a lot of refugees who want to do the computer training.”
Leaving the training facility, we were approached by a young man with a large 35mm camera slung around his neck. He was waving around a pair of photos blown up to around 6×8 inches. At first I was very confused by the photos; the first one appeared to show a large pile of animal intestines. For a moment my mind flashed to images of witch doctors auguring the future by examining entrails, but I couldn't imagine that practices like that took place here.
Then I saw the second photo and realized in absolute horror what I was looking at. The entrails were not from an animal; it was a man who had been completely disemboweled and mutilated, his face hacked with a machete. Before I could recoil in disgust, the photographer waived the photos in someone else's face.
He was speaking in English, but very quickly - so quickly that I had a hard time making out what he was saying. Jeremiah, Hisenburg and David huddled around him to discuss the situation as a small crowed gathered - young and old eager to peer at this two-dimensional horror show. The photographer gave the photos to Jeremiah in a large envelope.
“My God, what was that all about?” I asked. “Did that have to do with war crimes in Liberia?”
“No, that was here, this week,” Jeremiah sighed. “They found him like that and don't know who he is. They are trying to identify him and the photographer wants to sell the photos.”
“Why was he mutilated?” I asked, bracing for an answer for which I might not be prepared.
“Who knows these things,” Jeremiah continued, eager to think about something else.
We continued through the camp, but the images plagued me with each block, each turn. I have a high tolerance for Hollywood violence, as it were, but don't handle depictions of real violence quite well, particularly when exposure to it is unexpected.
Just the night before, because of an ongoing bout of jetlag, I found myself re-reading Ryszard Kapuscinski's brilliant war journal, The Soccer War, which documents his perilous war correspondent adventures covering two dozen conflicts in Africa, the Middle East and Latin America. On the final pages I read last night, Kapuscinski presented a brief interlude in which he pondered the idea of writing “a dictionary of various phrases that take on different meanings according to the degree of geographical latitude.” He offered examples of several words that might be suitable for such a dictionary, one of which was the word Spirits.
[The] act of destroying the corpse results from the conviction that a human being consists of not only a body but also the spirits that fill it. Many white people believe in a body and a soul, but their faith in one soul is merely a primitive simplification of a complicated feature of human existence: in reality a person's body is filled by many spirits proper to the various parts of the human organism. It would be naïve to believe that this complicated world of spirits, alive in the recesses of the human body, can be liquidated by a single bullet. [Or machete, apparently.] The body is only one element of a person's death: full death occurs only after the spirits have been destroyed or expelled…. Hence the necessity of destroying the corpse, particularly if the corpse belonged to an enemy whose spirits can later avenge him. There is no cruelty in this — for someone who is forced to fight against the dangerous and omnipresent world of spirits, which may be invisible but are hot on the heels of the living, it is simple self-defense.
Upon reading that passage last night, I recalled that he was writing much of this 40 years ago, and thought it was obvious Kapuscinski was obsessing over his experiences in the Belgian Congo and elsewhere. Back then, of course. Not today. Not now.
Perhaps I was wrong.
I was rescued from my spiritual torpor by a beautiful little girl with braided hair.
We were walking through a residential neighborhood, with lots of children and adults milling about. Suddenly I looked ahead and saw this little girl, jumping up and down as if she were on a magical pogo stick, chanting an adorable mantra of “Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!” Before I knew it, she jumped off the invisible pogo and darted towards me, locked my shins in an enormous bear hug, then scurried away. The tortured spirits of that corpse, plaguing me for Lord knows how long — time passes strangely when haunted by spirits — vanished without a trace.
Other children, none more than seven or eight years old, began to follow her lead. They approached me one at a time to shake my hand and say hello. I could barely keep up with them.
“Hello, how are you?” I asked them, adding, “I must be very popular!” I asked if I could take their pictures; before I could complete the question, eight or 10 of them jammed into a Napoleonic formation, row after row. They lacked true military discipline, though; rather than maintaining their lines, the children would dart ahead each other to appear at the front of the photograph, breaking all commonly accepted codes of conduct regarding picture-taking formations arranged according to height. Fortunately, they were in no rush for me to complete my assignment, so I let them weave among themselves while I snapped away, happy as can be.
My hosts, meanwhile, had wandered to the next neighborhood, so it was time for me to say goodbye. Many of the children followed me for an entire block, running and waving and shouting “bye bye!” to me. I was filled with warmth.
On the far side of the football pitch, we meandered down an uneven path, dammed with sandbags labeled UNHCR in black lettering. While chatting with Hisenburg, I was approached by a pretty teenage girl in a long white t-shirt and large hoop earrings.
“Hello, how are you?” she asked confidently.
“Fine, thank you,” I replied. “And how are you?”
“I am well, thank you. What are you doing here?”
“I'm visiting from the United States, and I was invited to come to the camp,” I said. “We've just been walking around for a while, meeting people, getting to know the camp a bit. How long have you lived in the camp?”
“Two weeks,” she replied, to my surprise.
“So you just came from Liberia, then?”
“Yeah, I am just visiting.”
“Do you have many family here?”
“Yeah, lots of people here.”
“How long do you plan to stay?”
“Maybe two weeks. We'll see. Bye….”
“Bye,” I replied, the conversation ending as suddenly as it began.
———–
I now realized we were far from the center of the camp, in a rural area with small farm plots. Further ahead there appeared to be another complex of buildings.
“We have actually left the camp boundaries,” Jeremiah explained. “But there are so many refugees they have to rent the surrounding land from Ghanaian families.”
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A teacher leads a group of Liberian women in an adult literacy class |
We reached the buildings, organized around a courtyard with several trees. A group of Liberian women were standing in the courtyard around a circle of desks, clapping slowly, while another woman stood in the center. Soon she started to speak in English, but I was too far away to make out what she was saying. Slowly, women got up from their desks, entered the circle, and began sketching patterns in the ground with a long stick.
“What are they doing?” I asked.
“It's a women's literacy program,” Jeremiah said. “One of the first parts of learning to read and write is learning how to form basic letters. It is a motivational way to learn each stroke of each character, while getting support from the others.”
Before I knew it, Jeremiah was getting permission from the group for me to enter the circle and take pictures. The entire group chanted “Yes, please” in unison when asked. I climbed between the desks and did my best to be unobtrusive — or, at least as unobtrusive as realistically possible, being a white man standing in a circle of African women in a field.
On the perimeter of the courtyard, Jeremiah took us to a series of classrooms, each filled with more adult literacy students. We were invited into each room; the classes would stand up and clap rhythmically to greet us. One classroom was using a fascinating technique to teach reading and writing: students had drawn a map of the camp, identifying its major features. Then they were asked to identify problems in the camp: sanitation problems, inadequate lighting and the like. The students were then challenged to debate the problems, prioritize them, and work together to draft language explaining their concerns, in the hope of working with NGOs to improve local conditions. You could see the pride in the face of the instructor and his students, most of whom were in their forties and older. They knew they were bettering themselves, and were glad that I could witness it, even if just for a moment.
After walking around the camp's school for the deaf — I was amazed they were in a position to build one — we looped our way back to the center of the camp, by way of the high school and football pitch. It was almost 4pm - we had been here for two hours. I could hardly believe how fast time had passed here in Buduburam. Then again, I was just a visitor, not a resident. Fourteen years must feel like an eternity.
Before leaving, though, I had two final assignments. First, I presented a copy of a National Geographic atlas that Susanne and I wanted to donate to the camp; the oversized reference book that nearly broke my back on the trip from America would be added to their community library. Then, we stopped for a few moments to say hello to Karl William, a charismatic young Ghanaian who worked in the camp. We'd hoped to connect earlier but he'd been busy.
We talked for a few minutes before getting ready to leave; he reached out to shake my hand, which I erroneously did in the usually white and western way - just an ordinary, firm handshake. I did try to slip him some skin, as they might have said in the 70s, by sliding out my fingers along his palm as I let go of his hand; I'd noticed several Ghanaians do this to me already this week.
“No, no, no, man, you've got it all wrong,” Karl said, laughing. He grabbed my hand and tried to show me the proper way to do it — first a normal handshake, then shifting your hands so your wrists pointed upwards, then your fingers curled like two interlocking C's. No problem - we used to do that one when I was a kid. Then came the hard part — releasing your fingers in such a way that both of you snapped your fingers upon exit. He snapped; I fumbled; the crowd laughed.
“This is humiliating,” I said. “I'm just a poor white boy from Boston. And each day people keep changing the secret handshake on me, like it's a conspiracy! You know there's no way I'll get this right.”
“You're staying until you practice,” he said. “One, two, three — snap. Again. One, two, three — snap. Now, that's better.”
No, it wasn't. I was pathetic. But I was happy to provide some comic relief. Meanwhile, two of the others demonstrated it for me, even having me shoot some video of it.
“Okay, did everyone get that?” I asked as they completed their shake.
With that, it was time to leave the refugee camp and return to Accra. David and I drove back to the city listening to the radio, the sun setting behind us. He quietly sang along to one of the songs on the radio. And I sat there marveling at how my life had changed in one short afternoon.


















Send this by E-mail
I enjoyed reading this blog entry. I just returned from 3 weeks in Liberia visiting a Liberian organization that runs several orphanges, primary & secondary schools, deaf home and school, along with several medical clinics. I fell in love with the Liberian people and hope that I have an opportunity to go back and visit. My eyes are glued to anything dealing with Liberia. Thanks to Andy Carvin for writing about your time in this Liberian Refugee Camp in Ghana.
I needed to find out about the Liberian Refugee Camp in Ghana, as I have befriended one of the refugees online. Thank you Andy Carvin for sharing your experiences about the time you spent there with these people and telling in depth about thier plight. I needed to know first hand, just what life is all about in Ghana.
I would like to find out how to make a direct donation to a person in the Liberian refugee camp. I have befriended a lady who lost her parents and living in this camp. I want to make sure the funds go directly to her. Is there any advice anyone can give me?
I would contact Hisenberg Togba at MOPGEL. Their website is mopgel.org. They’re based within the camp.
My wife and family have friends in Buduburam. We will be going there in October to see them. They are some of the infortunate ones with no means of income. I got a message today they are without food. They are really good people, a pastor and his wife and children. We have never seen them in person but will be there for a week. This should be fun and very interesting. I can make sure money gets to them by putting anyone in direct contact with my pastor friend. You can also go through me.
Hello There,
In response to the person who wishes to send money directly to the Liberian woman in the Buduburam Refugee Camp, I have been sending money to one particular woman and her two children for a year now and it gives me great joy, I send it through Western Union and they have a branch in the camp. You send it in the persons name that you are giving it too and put in a question and they have to have the answer to it to collect the money at Western union. So you will have to tell you friend the answer to the question that they will ask her at the bank, (eg: My daughters name , and the answer Jenifer) There is also a charge at Western Union to send it, if any-one else has another way of getting money each month to people in the camp I would love to know, so that way instead of paying the fee I could be sending more to my friend, Good Luck, If you want to email me my email address is——goochesparadise2002@yahoo.com.au
You can send money through Western Union at a fee, I have been doing it that way for a year, Good Luck.
You can send money to the person through WESTERN UNION they have a branch in the camp, it will cost to send it but they get it the same day, they also need a test question so they came pick it up with out ID, (eg: My daughters name –answer that they must say is for example Jenifer)then they get the money you send.
Sorry about the three entries, I thought it was saying it was not excepting it so I kept doing it in a shorter version, my mistake
Andy, thanks for writing about the camp in a way that gave me an idea of what it is like there. i am hopefully volunteering in the camp next year for 3 months and it really helped to read your description of walking around the camp. cant wait to get there!
Is there any way that I can help a Liberian refugee on the camp ? Let me know what you guys think.
I am thinking of volunteering at the camp in the near future and would like to get in contact with any people who have done similar or are planning to. Are there/many safety concerns for females volunteering there?
After a month long stay inside the Liberian Refugee Camp in Guyana, we have started a food program and have help many individuals. We want to sponsor a young man we met in the camp to come to the United States. His desire is to help make known the problems within the camp and develop aid for those within the camp.
Do you have any information how to start this process?
Hello
Thank you for sharing your experience at the Liberian refuge camp in Ghana. I will be in Accra, Ghana from November 29th through December 19th. I would like to visit the refuge camp and be of service to our sisters and brothers in some capacity. Would you please e-mail me back the name and e-mail of a contact person.
In addition I would like to visit Monrovia, Liberia, do you think its safe to go into the country?
Thank You In Advance
I have been talking to a “family” of 3 (a bother and 2 sisters) parents were killed in Liberia 1996. I have read much about the camp. and that some have returned to Liberia and the some have been replaced in europe. Is there a “replacemen” program in the United States? and if so how do I get more information about it??
Does anyone know how to make donations to any charitable organizations etc. that work within the camp. I would rather make a generel donation than send money to one particular person.
Thanks,
In an earlier post I wrote that my wife and I would be going to Buduburam refugee camp. We went there and came back a couple of days ago. In spite of the conditions there we had a lot of fun there. The people are so loving and accepting. We stayed in a pastors house about 100 yards from the camp. While we were there we ministered in a church in the camp. We basically lived like they do there. We got to see a snapshot of life like it is there. One of the highlites of the trip was that we got to feed about 75 to 100 orphans. Some of the orphans stay in the homes of the members of this church, the rest has to fend for themselves. It is really sad. The church tries to feed them at least once a month if they have money to do it. These truly are a people in need. If anybody wants to donate to these people you can go through me or I can get you in contact with the church that tries to take care of these orphans. My email address is gjhudak@charter.net
Thanks
Joe
Hello Andy,
I met someone who says he is staying in a Liberian Refugee camp (Buduburam), C/O P.O. Box 46 State House Accra. How can I verify this? I recieve many request from individuals in certain to chatrooms wanting me to send money. I would like to send this individual some money but want to make sure he is registered with the camp and it is not a hoax. Please let me know. Thanks.
To
Elisabeth
Bohn
end of August
Thank you very much for your information,
It is now helpful for me.
I found an internet friend christiana in this refugee camp.
I think she needs my help.
I can use your infomation now!
Thank you
Siegfried
Dear All,
Greetings there.I am Anthony Macedo Barlee, Programs Coordinator for RESPECT GHANA.I am a refugee volunteering for RESPECT GHANA which is a community Based Organization an affiliate of RESPECT International Canada. I do have a documentary that is addressing refugee issues on the Buduburam refugee camp that you could also used as a tool for creating awareness of refugee issues amongst school children in non-refugee schools.If you need a copy please contact us at RESPECT GHANA, Buduburam Refugee Camp,P.O.Box 46, State House, Accra-Ghana.
Visit our website at: http://www.respectrefugees.org or email at: buduburam@respectrefugees.org
Hello.
I read that someone here was asked to send money and I too was asked to send some items to the refugee camp in Buduburam Refugee Camp, Zone-09-023, Box 46, Accra, Ghana…I too would like to know if this is a hoax. I would be more than happy to send something but not sure if it is safe to do.
Thank you for your time
HOlly
I have been contacted by a refugee and put him through many tests (without him knowing) to verify that he was legitimate. He gained my full trust. He was very convincing in everything. I have already sent him rent money and food and water money for him and his little sister. I have seen him and his sister on a web cam while talking to him, and I even sent him a Bible in the mail to an adddress that I know for certain is an address of someone in the camp. He even sent me a picture of the Bible he got with him holding it. I am now having doubts though because he keeps asking me for more and more money for things like birthdays for his sister and for Christmas. He is now saying his sister is in the hospital with maleria. I don’t know if I should trust him or not. It is so much money to risk. Who can I ask or e-mail to check on that story for me?
Oh yeah, are there not free doctors and medicine at these refugee camps to help the people? That is one thing that makes me doubt.
Thank you Digital Divide and Andy Carvin for this report from last summer’s walkabout day at Buduburam. We need more stories and documentaries from Buduburam, as a unique refugee camp in Ghana. Liberians work hard to be self-sufficient against incredible odds. My former student and his family are in the camp waiting for their next step. Meanwhile, we found it important to educate yourself on international refugee issues, the role of UNHCR, their documents online, and human rights issues.
We wish all Liberians in Buduburam a pleasant and peaceful holiday. You are not forgotten. Stay strong. Peace.
nancy@friendsofdaniel.org
Hello to whom it may concern ..im writing a young woman there at the camp and i have an address but dont have the postal code for to send a card …she gave me an address of Accera Ghana…the liberia Refugee camp she is in …so what do i put for the postal code on the mail im sending? Is there one? or do i just send it to the address with no postal code for it? Thanks so much!
Here is the address I have for Hisenberg Togba, who is featured in the film.
Buduburam Refugee Camp- Ghana
Box 46 State House - Accra
Tel: + 233 244 808 178
Email: info @ mopgel.org
Andy Carvin ( or anyone ): You mentioned students who were drawing a map of the Buduburam camp.I wonder if they realize that such a map could be sold? I know that I would pay for a map of the camp.I have contacts in zone 11 but have never found a map showing the zones.If you or anyone knows of such a map please e-mail:dennisgood@emypeople.net
sorry, I don’t remember that.
LIke some others here,I am trying to verify a refugee’s identity to send money. They have provided copies of ids and convincing details of the camp, with photos. Any ideas? Can UNHCR help with this…or just another govnt agency with no answers??
The refugees who contacted me actually provided a list of detailed test questions about the camp to ask other refugees who contact you over the internet. I’d be happy to provide this list to anyone. But first, I have to verify the people who sent me the test list! Does anyone have a list of names and addresses at this camp.
To Joel…how did you finally prove they were who they said they were???
To anyone looking to verify a refugee living at Buduburam:
send an e-mail to: http://www.mopgel.org/
tell them the person’s address in the camp. They went out and talked to the person for me and verified that they actually lived there.
The website is geared toward gender equality - in my case the refugee who contacted me was a woman.
Yes there is a clinic apparently in the camp, but no money no visit.I read a piece in one of the many volunteer diaries that said a man and his 4 year old sick daughter sat outside the clinic, she was dying, they would not let her go in the ambulance to the hospital because he had no money and she died,
Also I read in a ghana site that said there a babies in the hospital that after they are born if the parent cant pay the hospital bill, you can not take the child home till you do, so this mother was going there daily to feed her baby.
There is a good site done by “Global Volunteer Network” go into it and find Refugee Camp Ghana, you will find that on the drop down arrow and you will find plenty of Volunteer Journals that the Volunteers write ,sometimes daily, they are great.
If you have contacts in Ghana, may I request that you check on some friends, GRACE CHEA, is washing clothes to help keep 15+ orphans fed, as of yesterday they have not eaten anything.
the children that don’t have mother and father end up fending for their selves which means no to little schooling, and little to no food. Grace is known through out the camp. Please send someone out to talk with her so that these children will get fed. Other contact options are: THE ADRESS IS BUDUBURAM REFUGEE CAMP P.O.BOX46 STATE HOUSE ACCRA GHANA, community head number 00233-244-59-38-12
this is not a scam, I am in the U.S. and unable to go help.
thank Andy but i too was on the refugee camp before. i spend about 3yrs there and trust me it was not a good one. it was hard on my family and i. and as God could have it for us we came to the U.S.A. i have been here for about 6yrs now and is planning to go back somtime in December.
I enjoyed reading this blog entry.
I met a young man online who said he was a refugee in Buduburam Camp. We chatted for a few weeks, then he asked for help. I had heard about internet scams, so was alarmed. He sent website addresses for me to read about the camp. I did my own web search without his assistance and clicked on a small ministry site. The pastor responded to my email.
He told me not to help this young man until he could locate him in the camp. A few days later, he confirmed the young man’s identity and that he indeed needed help. He was living in deplorable conditions and needed food. As a result, I am now networking with a few friends to help the young man and the pastor. This pastor has never asked me for anything. The pastor has founded a school and feeding program for about 50 orphans. He sends photos of the children often, he calls by phone, he has also sent us a wonderful video (he hired someone to produce) of the school.
If you would like to confirm that someone you are in contact with is indeed in the camp, perhaps I can help by asking my pastor/friend to physically locate that person. Contact me at: debirrah@yahoo.com
I ready enjoy spending time looking at your work and appreciate the structure of it.I was also a refugee in Ivory coast but later migrated to ghana due to the war and happen to live on the Buduburam refugee camp.I will ready like to help other refugees like myself.Is there a organization I can join? If so please contact me.
My daughters volunteered at Buduburam during their winter break from college in December. We are wondering if it is possible to sponsor one of the families by bringing them to the US and assisting them with establishing themselves. Does anyone know anything about this?
For those of you who volunteered at the camp, how did you go about it? Through a volunteer organization, or directly through the camp? How long were you there, and in what capacity?
Thanks for any input!
Hello Everyone
This is an amazing blog. I work for an inner city multi cultural church in St. Louis working for social justice and racial reconcilliation. I am in contact with hundreds of Liberian and Sierra Leonnian refugees who are here in the states. However, I will be in Ghana on May21 to June 16th for a huge conference, but i am looking to visit the camp, maybe find some of our peoples’ family members and try to see how we can help to foster better conenctions with people here in the States and those that are still on the camp. I will be emailing some of you who may be able to help. ALSO DOES ANYONE HAVE ANY GOOD CHURCH CONNECTIONS IN THE CAMP? Please let me know.
beckyraney@hotmail.com
Nepal is poor country and near about 15% people of the total population are disabled under poverty they are not able to afford the fee of the school,college fee neither they are able to buy the basics facts like try-cycle and wheel-chair for the physically disabled and white cane for the blind which will be comfortable for the disabled people.And the goverment is also not capable to danate for them who are physically and mentally disabled. We have a non goverment organization named “Nepal disabled association Rautahat Nepal” (Chandranigahpur) which is regestered in central district office , social welfare council and National fedration of the disabled Nepal of our country. we have been working in this field as a social worker. Now we are getting lots of finincial problem so we are requesting to donate for the disabled people who are under poverty.If any documents are needed for that we will provide soon.
How may I get in touch with some of these Liberian refugee’s is there a message board where I may talk with them or is there a messenger they use.
I want to help as much as I am able, so I need the name of a Pastor and church I can go through.
Hi My name is Vicki Miracle. I also have been in contact with a young man named Reuben Martor in zone 7 #123. I have sent him and his family several boxes but he said the cost to get the boxes was very high. He said it cost $70 us for 6 shoe box size boxes. I had sent him money to pay for it by Western Union. I would like to continue helping him however I would also like to find a way to send packages without him having to pay so much. Does anybody have any ideas. I also would like to know about sending him to a computer college can anyone give me any input on that too. Please feel free to email me at Miraclemountainranch@yahoo.com Thank you very much Vicki
I am from india, I am doing support handicapped peoples for education and supply eduipment ( calliper and stick). If you can any kind help possible help our insistution. eamil zeno_gany@yahoo.com