Posted by: Rick McNary | January 7, 2009

Girl with a Purple Plate

My friend, Romona Baker, of Springfield, MO, wrote this about an experience she had in Nicaragua.  

Girl with Purple Plate
Just about a year ago I was behind my video camera in a Rainbow Network children’s lunch center in Nicaragua. Children came to eat in the dim little shack made from old, weathered boards and stayed for the afternoon school run by volunteer teachers. Most of the beautiful, dark-eyed, ragged children were caught up in the excitement of our troop of visiting, white-skinned tourists with water bottles, fanny packs, silly hats and cameras. It was hard for me to capture the pathos of the hungry children distracted by the sideshow.

Then I saw her, the little girl who paid no attention to the Americans. She was only interested in the contents of her plate. The light was from behind her, layering shadows on her face as she scooped up each heaping spoonful, hardly chewing the last. I watched through the camera, as she chased the last bits of rice around her plate. My tears made it hard to see what I was filming as she raised her plate and licked off the last residue. In my mind, I still see the light shining through that purple plate and her dark eyes looking at me over its edge. When I watched the video later, I witnessed again the magical details. Her tongue curls as it sweeps the moisture left on the plate. When she finally lowers it, still looking through the camera straight into my eyes, the shiny surface reflects purple light across her face.
Even amateur photographers like me recognize those as once in a lifetime, Kodak moments. Yet for me the haunting mental image represents the hundreds of children in Nicaragua I have seen cleaning their plates of every last morsel. Even my imagination and the photos of world photographers are not sufficient to translate my experience to comprehending the hunger present in other countries.

In Springfield, Missouri, where I live, there are 11,000 children who attend the public elementary schools. In the world, there are 16,000 children who die each day because of a lack of food.

Girl Licking a Purple Plate

Girl Licking a Purple Plate


Responses

  1. Thanks for posting Rick!
    Romona has always had such a heart for children such as these.


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