Amadu Kamara: That Liberian expression, repeated by Amadu Kamara as he stood before a crowd of Halifaxs business and social elite Wednesday, speaks to how villages in that impoverished country care for the children in their midst, according to The Chronicle Herald. His daughter, Massan, will graduate from J.L. Ilsley High School on Friday. In September, the aspiring dentist, born in a refugee camp in Guinea after her parents fled civil war-ravaged Liberia, will begin a Dalhousie University bachelor of science program. It was one of several universities to which the honours student was accepted and A child is not for one person. In Liberia, there is no daycare, he told the group gathered at the Saraguay Club to mark the first graduating class from the Pathways to Education program. He explained that in Liberian villages, everyone looks out for the children, with clothing passed along among families as the children grow.
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26.6.14