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A screen-grab of the video where Rashida is walking perfectly in Niger.
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Skeptics sometimes doubt that foreign humanitarian aid does any good. I always answer that it’s hard and doesn’t always work, but some interventions have a very high success rate. One example is clubfoot: About one out of 800 children worldwide are born with one or both feet twisted in, and if this isn’t corrected the child will be unable to walk. In the U.S. this is routinely corrected, but in poor countries the repair often never happens. In that case, the child is never able to walk, is unable to go to school, never marries, and often ends up a beggar. Yet clubfoot is easily repaired in a poor country for $500 or less. |
In my book “A Path Appears,” written with my wife, Sheryl WuDunn, we told of a little girl in Niger named Rashida who received this treatment, and the organization involved sent me a great video of her walking along perfectly normally. She’s going to school now and looking great. So this is an age of miracles: For $500, you can help children walk and change their life trajectory. Two organizations involved in clubfoot are HopeWalks.org and Miracle Feet. |
Back in the U.S., our problems can't be fixed quite as easily as Rashida's clubfoot. But the Mueller hearings did at least illuminate our problems, and here's my take on the echo of Watergate days and the unfortunate loyalty in some quarters to party over country. Please read, and then leave a comment! |
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