At just 16 years old, Nangiro (name changed) carries memories no child should bear. Her home village in Napak, Karamoja, was struck by a severe drought that turned fields into dust and left the family’s goats, once their lifeline, dead in the sand. Each day, her mother’s tears deepened as food disappeared and her children’s bodies grew thinner. “We had nothing left,” Nangiro recalls softly.

When a neighbour spoke of opportunities in Kampala, Nangiro’s mother made the painful decision to send her daughter away, scraping together what little money she could. The promise of work quickly crumbled. Upon arrival in the city, those she travelled with vanished, abandoning her on the crowded streets of Katwe.

Nangiro’s life since has been a battle for survival. She begs when she can, or washes dishes in roadside stalls for a few coins. At night, she curls up beside a drainage channel, wrapping herself in a plastic bag whenever it rains. Strangers chase her, call her names, sometimes even beat her. Yet beneath the harshness of the streets, she holds tightly to memories of home, the songs sung with her mother under Karamoja’s star-filled skies.

What keeps Nangiro going is her dream. “I want to go back to school. I want to be a teacher,” she says, her eyes brightening at the thought of a classroom, a uniform, and a life beyond hunger. She imagines one day returning to Karamoja, standing before children in her village with chalk in hand, ensuring that their future will not be stolen as hers was.

For Karamoja Tumaini Network (KTN), stories like Nangiro’s are not statistics. They are urgent calls for action. Every day, children from Karamoja find themselves stranded on Kampala’s streets, torn from their culture and exposed to danger. KTN’s mission is to help them return to safe homes, reconnect with education, and rediscover dignity in their communities.

Change is possible, but it begins with one child. Supporting Nangiro means more than keeping her alive on the streets; it means giving her a real chance to learn, to grow, and to build a future. With support, Nangiro’s story can shift from despair to hope, from survival to opportunity.

Her journey is only one among many. But with collective action, we can ensure that the streets of Kampala are no longer the end of the road for Karamojong children. Instead, they can be the beginning of new dreams, dreams that take root in classrooms, families, and communities across Karamoja.

Compiled by Logwee John Mark

Nangiro’s dream is to wear a school uniform again