Don Felder, a wealthy African American businessman, has paid to build and equip schools in rural areas of Ghana.
He’s
given some students scholarships to attend those schools and funded
water and other projects throughout the West African country.
Much of
that work has gone unnoticed by the general public, but his generosity
has had a significant impact on the lives of those he’s helped.
There’s
Mary Sassa, a tall, soft-spoken woman, who’s about to complete a
Master’s degree in human resources next July.
Sassa, 28, grew up in the
remote town of Obodan, where getting a high school diploma was an
unusual accomplishment for a girl, let alone an advanced degree. “I’ve
not seen any girl who has achieved where I am now. None have graduated
from college,” Sassa said. “Some of them are willing to climb higher,
but the money is a problem.”
In Obodan, surrounded by
lush mountains and abundant pineapple farms, there was no high school
for girls until Felder came along in 2001. At that time, many families,
whose incomes were barely a few thousand dollars a year, sent their sons
away to school. Their daughters stayed home and helped on the farms.
Felder,
the founder of a successful international telecommunications company in
New Jersey, contributed about $30,000 to assist Obodan officials in
building the Diaspora Girls’ Senior High School, a private boarding
school. Sassa was in that first class of students.
Felder
and his wife, Denise, met Sassa, the youngest of six children, shortly
after she graduated from junior high school. “We met Mary and were just
impressed with her drive and ambition to have an education,” Felder
said.
Sassa had been offered scholarships to attend high
schools in other cities but had to turn them down because she had no
place to stay. Her life growing up in Obodan was hard and she had always
seen education as the key to lifting her family out of the poverty that
held them all back. “My dad married three wives. He had two rooms for
my mom. All of us were using one room and one room was for my mom. My
dad died when I was three months or so. My mom was there but she was not
all that strong.
Sassa’s birth was hard on her mother,
who had serious health problems the rest of her life. She died when
Sassa was 18. With no father and a mother who was sick most of the time,
Sassa and her siblings were “on our own,” she said.
Even
when she was in elementary school, Sassa worked long hours for little
money to pay her school fees. “I was struggling, working on people's
pineapple farms most of the time. I woke up early to go to the farms,
work, then come back from school and do the same thing,” she recalled.
“On Saturdays and holidays, I was doing that throughout from when I
started basic 3 until junior high.”
After she graduated
from junior high, Sassa took sewing classes at the local vocational
school for a year. That was when Felder arrived in Obodan and put up the
money for the school. Sassa remembered those early days. “We had
30-something (girls) and the number kept reducing,” she said. “This is a
remote area and people didn't believe it would work. They said you guys
are wasting your time, so some dropped out.”
But Sassa
never considered dropping out. One of her teachers at Diaspora, Lov
Amengor, said she was always impressed with Sassa’s drive. “She was an
excellent student, very obedient,” Amengor said. “She was always on time
and abided by the rules.”
Sassa went on to gain the
distinction of becoming the first person from her village to get a high
school diploma. Don Felder was proud of her. “She finished with such
high grades and she wanted to further her education and attend a
university there,” Felder recalled.
Sassa added, “[Don]
and his wife, they told me if I secured admission in a school in Ghana,
they would sponsor it. I said fine, so I managed to secure admission in a
private university in Accra and they did everything. They paid my
tuition, everything up to my fourth year. You hardly run across such
people. I’m very grateful."
That generosity also extends
to Felder’s children. “For my daughter’s 16th birthday, she asked people
not to give her any gifts, but if they wanted to give anything, give
money to help send a girl to college. We started sending Mary money to
attend college. She graduated with honors.”
The Felders
are also paying for Sassa’s graduate school tuition. They have given
other girls scholarships to attend Diaspora and paid the college tuition
of a few other students in Obodan as well. “They make us feel better
than we do them, they just don’t know it,” Felder said.
But
Felder’s generosity didn’t stop there. It extended to Anyako, a town
near Obodan. There, Felder paid most of the $20,000 it cost to build and
stock a library at Anlo Awomefia High in 2008. He also sent large
shipments of other school supplies.
Ghanaian engineer and businessman
Michael Attipoe said the Anyako school, before Felder’s donations, was
“a very old building made of mud.” “When you enter the classes," he
said, "wiring is poor or nonexistent, cracks are in the building,
windows are not in good shape, so was the furniture, no computers or
bathrooms.”
Attipoe says since Felder made his donations,
the rate of students passing tests to be admitted in a Ghanaian
university has gone from 5 percent to 30 percent. “That’s very high for a
village school. The results compare to what you see in the city
schools,” he said.
Because many rural schools and
residents often use unsanitary water from local streams used by cattle,
Felder also paid to have six water wells dug in the area. Two are at the
Diaspora Girls’ Senior High School, and four in other remote
communities. In addition, Felder recently arranged to have a well dug at
a clinic in the town of Pokrom, near Obodan, where medical workers were
using bagged water to treat patients. “I immediately called the company
that does the boreholes for us, he looked at it and I called my friends
back in the states and they said take care of it. Within a week we had
water running in the clinic,” he said.
Some might ask why
a busy businessman takes these projects in Ghana. Felder said the
answer is simple. “Years ago when I had nothing, I asked the Lord to
bless me and let me be a blessing. So the Lord has blessed me and I’m
only trying to live up to my end of the deal,” Felder said.
There’s
a plaque on the wall at the front of the PTA meeting room at Diaspora.
It lists Sassa as one of the school’s pioneers—something Sassa says
would not have been possible without the Felder’s help. “It makes me
very proud to see it because anyone who comes here will know that I was
once here,” she said. “We have programs in this hall, so when I come for
the program, I just lift up my head and I see it and I’m cool, I’m
cool.”
And Felder, who continues to help fund the
installation of water wells in Ghana’s remote areas, says Sassa is one
of the brightest students he’s helped.
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