The Ahmadiyya Youth Association donates to the school for deaf and blind people of Cape Coast



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The youth wing of the Ahmadiyya (Khuddam-Ul-Ahmadiyya) Muslim community of the Central Region's Abura Area donated various items worth several thousand Cedis from Ghana to the US. Cape Coast School for the Deaf and Blind.

The items, acquired mainly through membership contributions, included a bag of gari, beans, rice, 55 mosquito nets, boxes of soap and detergent, badorted soft drinks, rolls of toilet paper, sachets of water, mobs and sanitary napkins.


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They also played a football game and socialized with the students to get acquainted with school activities and to check for themselves how students live on campus.

Presenting the articles, Rahman Arthur Quarm, chairman of the group, said the donation was a fulfillment of the community's annual charity projects, which aimed to help the poor in society.

He added that the community had embarked on similar exercises at the Ankaful Maximum Prison, at Ankaful Leprosarium and in other orphanages in the area.

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"We carry out many humanitarian activities through which we preach peace and love. We want to have as much impact as possible on life. Our religion teaches us to be caring, loving, caring and, above all, to guard each other. Do not be surprised. We are only following the teachings of Islam, "he said.

Regina Elsilfie, Deputy Head of Academic Affairs, who received the documents on behalf of the school, congratulated the Ahmadiyya community on her kindness and called on other religious and cooperative institutions to visit them regularly.

She mentioned the poor road network, the lack of clean water and the lack of teaching and learning materials among the challenges facing the school.

She said that the school did not have enough Braille for blind students, while she could power a single projector, which made teaching very difficult for teachers.

The School for the Deaf and Blind in Cape Coast currently has more than 500 students.


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