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Helping people find their voice

Tue, Dec 01, 2020

Ben David 鈥12 was not homesick. Home for Ben was Uganda鈥攈e grew up there and lived in an orphanage after his parents died. When he graduated from Calvin with a degree in media production, he had no desire to go back. He and his wife, Kari David 鈥13, a speech pathologist, settled in Grand Rapids. Kari had what she called her 鈥渄ream job.鈥 Uganda seemed very far away.

But something changed.

How their hearts broke

The director of the orphanage in Uganda called Ben one day and asked if he could help find a speech therapist for two kids with disabilities. The director hinted that maybe Ben and Kari could come to help with these children.

鈥淚 told him that we would look and try to find someone else,鈥 Ben said. They started researching and looking for services for these children half a world away. And their hearts broke.

Even now, five years later, the Davids know the statistics off the top of their heads. In Uganda, people with disabilities make up 24% of the population of 45 million people, and most of those people will never get the services they need. They learned that in Uganda, people with disabilities are considered a curse and are locked away. Their parents carry deep shame, and there is a high risk of children being abused or even killed.

They started praying together for God to send someone else to Uganda to help these children. 鈥淎nd then,鈥 said Ben, 鈥淚 started to feel really homesick.鈥

Kari was also deeply moved. 鈥淭he situation seemed too daunting to address. We felt completely unqualified to make any impact whatsoever given the size of the need,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e continued to live our normal life in Michigan, but over time, I couldn鈥檛 get those two children off my heart and my mind.鈥

How they follow God

鈥淚t absolutely seemed crazy,鈥 said Kari. 鈥淏ut it was so clear that God was telling us to go, and we had peace about it.鈥

鈥淎nd we were scared out of our minds,鈥 Ben added with a laugh. They sold everything they had in Grand Rapids and flew to Uganda.

After a few years of working with the kids at the orphanage, the Davids launched Hope Speaks in 2017. The nonprofit has a mission 鈥渢o inspire hope and raise voices for children with disabilities through speech therapy, education, and advocacy.鈥

Hope Speaks serves more than 800 children with disabilities and their families.

Kari discovered that speech therapy only scratched the surface of the kids鈥 needs. 鈥淭he families lacked a support system and the education to advocate for their kids,鈥 Kari said.

鈥淎t the first parent support group, parents could not believe that someone else was going through what they were going through,鈥 Kari said.

This led Ben and Kari to develop a holistic approach to meet the needs of families. They hired social workers. They created systems to empower families economically. They established outreach locations in the kids鈥 home communities so they could start educating neighborhoods. They started hiring Ugandan speech pathologists and providing resources to grow the field in Uganda. And they made connections in the government to advocate for people with disabilities.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been so cool to see these families鈥 perspectives change and their view of their children change,鈥 Kari said. 鈥淭hey go from seeing their children as a burden and a curse to seeing them as a gift and a child made in the image of God.鈥

鈥淚f you would have told us five years ago that this is what God would do through the ministry in this short amount of time, we probably would have freaked out and left,鈥 said Ben. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing to see how he provided and so many lives have been impacted.鈥

How they are staying connected

Even though they are more than 7,000 miles away from Calvin鈥檚 campus, the Davids are still connected. In January, the speech pathology and audiology department brought a team to learn over interim. That team included Judy Vanderwoude, Jill Bates, and Brian Kreisman. VanderWoude and Bates have also served on the board of directors for Hope Speaks. Erika Leicty 鈥13 volunteered as the clinical director for two years and Brittany Zuidema 鈥18 volunteered as a summer intern.

To hear an interview with the Davids about their work, watch a .

To learn how you can support Hope Speaks and about the 2020 Calvin interim visit to the organization, visit .