Juba, 15 February, 2020 / 12:09 am (ACI Africa).
Shortly after Loreto Sisters established a Primary and Secondary school in the South Sudanese Diocese of Rumbek in 2010, bringing hope to thousands of children who used to walk for long distances in search of education, the Sisters identified a health gap among school-going children that needed their immediate attention.
According to Loreto Secondary School Principal, Sr. Orla Treacy, school-going children started missing their classes in large numbers owing to illnesses especially during the mosquito season when many get malaria. In an interview with ACI Africa Friday, February 14, Sr. Treacy said that sick children in the school’s boarding facility were ferried to hospitals away from school while day scholars stayed away from school for lack of treatment.
“As the population began to grow in both the Primary and Secondary school, we discovered that one of the greatest reasons for absenteeism was health; as a boarding school we could be taking up to 15 girls to the clinics in town during the malaria season and our own primary school students were also suffering,” Sr. Treacy recounted to ACI Africa.
She added, “Again the local community invited us to consider a clinic.”
Thankfully for the sisters, one of the nuns in the congregation, Loreto Sr. Penina, a nurse from Kenya, travelled to the Diocese of Rumbek in 2016 and began a small school clinic for the needs of the students.