UGLY GRACE

The small things matter – Fred and Emmanuel’s story.

Brring…briiingg. The phone in the cold, draughty hallway of my student digs rang shrilly. As I picked up the phone, a cheery voice said, ‘Hello Paula?’ It was a lady from a temp agency.

I was in my final year of university and (in need of some extra cash), I’d registered with this agency, half assuming they’d have so many applications that I’d probably never get a reply.

But here they were on the phone, they’d received my application form and were inviting me for an interview.

An interview? Seriously? I’d never had one of those before. What did you wear? How did you behave? I wasn’t sure I even wanted to do it!

However, despite my misgivings, standing in the chilly hallway, I scribbled down the details and accepted the offer secretly thinking that I’d probably ring them in a day or so and cancel.

Little did I know but that simple interview was to kickstart a chain of events that over the next 20 years, would be completely life-changing.

In the days leading up to the appointment I nearly cancelled a couple of times but on the day itself, I summoned up some guts, dressed in my best trousers and smart jacket and within days, remarkably, I’d landed my first incredible part time job.

I was sent to the HQ of a local TV station and as it would transpire, my part time temp role (in between Uni lectures) was to take calls for the biggest daytime TV programme in the country ‘This Morning’.

I loved it! Every day, there would be a live televised phone in and it was my job (along with a team of others) to chat to viewers, record their comments and decide which ones would be put forward to go on air. As I strolled along Liverpool’s Albert Dock, past the famous floating map which was televised each day, knowing my pass could get me into the studios, I felt like I’d truly landed on my feet. Of course, it was only a temporary job at that point but I was getting some great life experience…not to mention some fabulous stories to share in the pub.

And then there was big news.

This Morning announced they were moving the whole programme from Liverpool to London and unexpectedly I was asked if I wanted to go with them. It was a BIG move. I’d only ever been to London a few times as a child but here I was, now recently graduated from Liverpool Uni with my English degree and no immediate job plans. It was an opportunity too good to be missed.

And so about eight weeks later, my dad drove me and a car packed full of boxes down to London where I began my new life as a 21 year old, working in the amazing craziness of daytime TV.

My new job was heading up the travel department. My team’s job was to get all the TV guests from wherever they were in the world to the studios (and back) in time for their on air slot. Throw in the factor of unpredictable flights, trains and infamous London traffic, the responsibility of the job was pretty immense.

But I loved it. I loved being in the studio with my celebrity guests, walking around with my talkback set on, calling drivers to side entrances to whisk celebrities (the kind I’d only ever read about) home and dealing with all kinds of unusual travel dramas. Oh the stories I could tell.

TV jobs can be hard-going though and after nearly two years, I felt it was time to follow a different path and over the next few years, I got an incredible opportunity working as Comms Manager for LICC and then eventually moved to aid and development charity, World Vision.

Still with me? There’s a point to this long and convoluted tale, I promise!

Working as the celebrity coordinator at World Vision, one of my first tasks was to highlight the increasing number of children who were being affected by HIV and AIDS across Africa. The statistics were horrifying and it seemed an almost impossible task but somehow in my guts, I knew there must be a way to tell the story in a way that people would really hear.

It then occurred to me that I might already know people who could help. And so a few phone calls later, a colleague and I found ourselves back in the Editor’s office at This Morning, asking if we could take the programme’s Agony Aunt, (the late) Denise Robertson and a crew to Uganda to meet children being affected by the relentless spread of HIV.

Finally after more discussion, we got a green light and some while later, we found ourselves landing in Kampala surrounded by flight cases of camera equipment.

Over the next week, we followed a planned itinerary and met some truly incredible people. We met families who had been devastated to lose five or more children to the scourge of Aids. One lady had buried 11 of her children and grandchildren and lived on a plot of land surrounded by simple wooden crosses marking their graves.

Toward the end of the trip, we had a little bit of unplanned time one day, so we decided to go off the beaten track and see if we could find just one more story to record to help finalise the film. I remember it being a warm and sticky day and we had to trek up a slight incline carrying some of the camera gear. We came to a clearing and with the help of some translators were led to the home of two young boys, Fred and Emmanuel.

At first, it was difficult to take in what I was seeing and hearing. But as the story unfolded, I learned these boys (both under 12 years old) were living alone as both of their parents had died. They were clearly hungry, Emmanuel sat in the corner of their simply constructed one-room house, with his arms wrapped round his body, shivering (despite the warmth of the day).

On a table was a big, red tomato. It looked juicy and delicious, but it was their only food. They were carving small chunks out of it and eating it, trying to make it last for as long as possible.

Thankfully, after filming their story, we were able to help them. We returned the next day with bags of rice, flour, oil and (fresh from the market), a goat! How I managed to wrestle a somewhat reluctant goat into the back of a pickup truck, is a story for another day!

When the programme finally aired, it generated a huge response for World Vision. Denise communicated the need brilliantly and the viewers responded in their thousands. Standing in front of the TV at the World Vision offices, watching the show go out and hearing all the phones ringing crazily behind me, is a moment I will never forget. It felt like we were (accidentally) part of something utterly extraordinary.

Over the years that followed, I never forgot Fred and Emmanuel. I had a couple of updates and I heard how much the programme had changed their lives. Thanks to the show, World Vision’s support and Denise’s epic fundraising, the boys were given a new home, were able to go to school and I heard they were now growing produce on a small plot of land which enabled them to have an income.

And then, at the beginning of 2018, something extraordinary happened.

I was sitting in a meeting at work and needed to look up something on LinkedIn. It’s not a site I use very often but as I opened the app, I noticed I had a message from someone called Fred.

Intrigued, I read it and quickly realised this was THE Fred…of Fred and Emmanuel.

Somehow, even though 20 years had passed, Fred remembered our visit with great detail and thanks to all the assistance they’d received, he was now part of the Denise Robertson Foundation, helping orphaned children. He and Emmanuel had even adopted an orphan themselves.

I nearly dropped my phone in complete shock and delight.

And as I left the meeting and returned to my desk, I found I had a voicemail from a UK representative of the Foundation, asking if I’d call them back. It turns out they’d been looking for people who were on the original trip to Uganda for quite some time and they were really pleased to have finally tracked one of us down.

It was so great (and more than a little overwhelming) to get the full update from the boys and hear how well they were doing, more than 20 years after the programme had aired.

For me, through 20+ years of an astonishing story, I am reminded of one simple thing – the big things come from small things.

Going (reluctantly) to a job interview as a student and landing a seemingly insignificant part-time job led to a new job, new connections, a trip and ultimately two young boys having their worlds transformed.

On a grey day, we can easily despise the small things, turn over in bed, allow our nerves to get the better of us and yet, what if, those simple, ordinary, everyday things have the power to impact the world around us?

Getting up each day might feel like a chore as you go to a job you dislike or have to break up arguments between children, get stuck in traffic or find yourself doing a task you really don’t want to do. But what if every small action is part of a journey, towards greater, life-transforming things?

What if today is the day, YOU will be the right person in the right place at the right time?

You might never see the effects or get the opportunity to hear what happened next, but what if?

What if?

** Update (Oct 12, 2021). This Morning recently broadcast another update from Fred and it’s amazing to see everything they are doing. For more information, take a look at The Denise Foundation.

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uglygrace

Writer & Blogger

  • Debola

    Really it’s the little things that drive the big ones, the way a small bolt and nut can ground a multi-million dollar equipment.

  • AMAZING STUFF, Illustrating just how Almighty God leads us step by step, one t a time and each step requiring faith—- and obedience

    Thank you Paula !

  • Breathtaking. What an awesome God we serve, who would allow us to be part of such amazing stories!

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