Professor Provides Means to Dream for Orphans in Africa

Some at the University of Cincinnati (UC) College of Nursing call him Dr. Jaja. Others know him as Professor Jaja. Twenty-two children living at an orphanage in Sierra Leone call him dad or Uncle Cheedy.

Regardless of his title, Cheedy Jaja, PhD, associate professor of research, continues to impact others' lives at every opportunity. In response to the 2014 Ebola epidemic in West Africa, Jaja spent six weeks providing Ebola relief work to patients in his native country, Sierra Leone — one of three African countries hit hardest by the deadly virus. Four months later, he returned to provide additional care during the summer months of 2015.

Although the World Health Organization declared Sierra Leone free of the 17-month outbreak on Nov. 7, 2015, Jaja realizes Ebola destroyed more than the nearly 4,000 Sierra Leone lives it ended. That's why he got involved in Dream Home, an orphanage that cares for Sierra Leone children orphaned by Ebola.

"We're taking care of 22 kids right now, but there are literally thousands of kids in Sierra Leone who were made orphans because of Ebola," Jaja says. "These kids are the fortunate ones."

A report conducted by Street Child, a charity dedicated to creating educational opportunity for vulnerable children in West Africa, identified more than 12,000 Sierra Leone children who lost their primary caregiver to Ebola. Another 3,000 lost both parents.

"These are kids who life dealt them a very bad hand, and I just feel like I have an obligation to make a difference in their lives," Jaja says. "I don't think everybody gets this opportunity, and the fact that I have this opportunity, I want to make the best of it."

Jaja became involved in Dream Home during his first round of Ebola relief work in December of 2014, when he learned that Sylvester Renner, a long-time friend from college, planned to establish an orphanage for children who lost parents to Ebola through Develop Africa—a nonprofit organization Renner created to facilitate meaningful and sustainable development in Africa that also provided Ebola relief aid during the crisis.

With help from community members and other nonprofit organizations such as GlobalGiving and Door of Hope, Dream Home opened its doors to its first residents in May of 2015. Located in Wellington in the eastern outskirts of Freetown, Sierra Leone, and Renner's hometown, the orphanage houses children ages 2 to 17. The majority of children living in Dream Home lost both parents to Ebola. Three residents even contracted the virus and survived. A staff comprised of a foster mother and father, a part-time nurse, two cooks, two security personnel and an orphanage director and secretary ensure the children live in a supportive home that not only meets all of their needs but also fosters dreams.

"Even though they've lost so much, we want them to dream again—to believe that there is hope that they could be whatever they want to be," Jaja says.

Jaja's efforts are bringing out the best in people. "People are calling in out of the blue to offer to help," he says. "For example, we got a call from a group called Plumbers Without Borders. They are going to donate a solar water pump for the orphanage."

Some of his students at the UC College of Nursing are also getting involved. They are working on setting up a telehealth program to monitor the children at the orphanage and do physical assessments via video conferencing using iPads.

"The UC nursing students are going to create a template so that in the fall when another group of students signs up for the community nursing course, they will continue the project," he explains. "What's innovative about this is that it's a way of getting the students involved in global health without moving out of the country."
Dream Home provides ample opportunity for the children to prosper through structured educational, religious and recreational activities. While the orphanage supports education and hard work, Jaja says providing an environment for the children to grow up as regular kids is just as important.

"It's my dream, it's my goal, it's my wish that all these kids will end up being successful individuals and they in turn can make an impact in other people's lives."

Jaja continuously works to raise funds and plan for the orphanage's growth as its board's clinical director. Though he acknowledges running an orphanage takes copious time and resources, Jaja says he does it out of love for the children, all of which have changed his life.

"Once you get to meet them, their spirits are infectious and you can't stop thinking about them," Jaja says. "I wake up in the morning, and I think about these kids. I welcome anyone who wants to join me in this effort. They are wonderful kids, and they deserve the best."

Written by Katie Coburn with additional reporting by Amanda Chalifoux and Bill Bangert

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