LIFE
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Trees for Life empowers people by demonstrating that in helping each other we can unleash extraordinary power that impacts our lives. © the areas of education, health and environment. We focus on long-term fundamental solutions in Trees for Life is a non-profit organization, to which contributions are tax deductible.
Trees for Life
3006 W. St. Louis • Wichita, KS 67203 • (316) 945-6929 www.treesforlife.org
Spring 2007
Joy of Reading Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Jeffrey Faus Former Volunteer Jeffrey became a volunteer in 1993 after receiving a degree in English. After four years as a full-time volunteer, he joined the staff as a writer and editor.
As I stepped through the large metal gate into the library courtyard, I felt myself relax. My nerves had been frazzled from the noisy, busy atmosphere of Addis Ababa and our bumpy ride through rock-strewn, dusty back streets. In the courtyard were two large open tents where children sat quietly reading or doing schoolwork. On my right was a small garden. Stately trees, tropical plants and flowers gently waved in the breeze. “This isn’t just a library,” I thought. “This is a haven for children.” I was in Ethiopia for a week, on my way to a conference in Ghana. I had come to visit my friend Yohannes. But this story began long before that. In 2003, Yohannes Gebregeorgis came to Trees for Life in
Wichita to share his vision. He grew up in Ethiopia and never saw a reading book until he was nineteen. He fell in love with reading and eventually became a children’s librarian at the San Francisco Public Library. When he learned that children’s books were still practically unavailable in Ethiopia, he envisioned starting the first children’s library in his home country. Seeing his deep commitment
to serve, Trees for Life helped him establish the library. Now, three years later, I was visiting Yohannes to see how things had progressed. As we toured the Shola Children’s Library, he told me it had received more than sixty thousand visits from children this year. Yohannes founded the nonprofit Ethiopia Reads, which has already grown beyond the first library. With support from