Ruth Acheinegeh
"I spoke Pidgin English as a kid," says Ruth Acheinegeh, who grew up in
the city of Bamenda in northwest Cameroon, in Central Africa, until age
three, when she contracted polio. "I had my elementary education in an
institution, 50 miles away, that takes care of children with
disabilities. Disability was a cultural stigma at the time." Returning
home at age 13, Acheinegeh got around with crutches and a brace on her
left leg. "My good leg," she notes. Her parents hoped that she could
learn to type and find a job, but she had greater ambitions. She stayed
in school and completed an advanced college certificate in business
management at age 28, just as her oldest brother was running the family
business, a shop in the city's main market, into the ground. "I became
the first woman to sell at the market," she says. "My younger brother
helped out. Ruthy's Shop sold basic commodities needed at home: canned
foods, milk, sugar, soap, but no perishables." When a customer brought
in an application form for a three-week training for women with
disabilities offered by Mobility International in Eugene, she applied,
and in 2010 took her first-ever plane ride to attend the workshop. On
her return to Bamenda, she launched the Northwest Association for Women
with Disabilities, and she later attended conferences in Istanbul and
Brazil. At the end of 2016, civil war broke out between English and
French-speaking factions in Cameroon. "I got out in February 2017,"
says Acheinegeh, who stopped in D.C. for a month to assess her future
possibilities. "I've been in Eugene since then. I applied for asylum
and it was granted." She volunteered at NextStep computer recycling for
a year, until she got a permit to work, and she now supervises and
teaches computer dismantling to NextStep volunteers. "My goal is to
send computers to Cameroon," she says, "so that children with
disabilities can learn IT."
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 17 October 2019
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