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A Senior’s Comfort Zone Includes the World’s Ailing

More news stories on Racial Suicide

Waveney Ann Moore, St. Petersburg Times, Jan. 19

ST. PETERSBURG—At 73, Patricia Stoddard believes she has plenty to offer a hurting world. The retired teacher and perennial Peace Corps volunteer takes off for Africa next month.

It will be her fifth trip to the region as a volunteer. This time, she will establish a school for 70 orphans. The petite, energetic woman can’t wait to be off. She bought a Berlitz book and tape and is studying Swahili.

“I have my new passport, my malaria pills. I started to collect things. Today I got on the Internet and saw that there are 1.1-million AIDS orphans in Kenya alone and now they’re like throwaway kids,” she said during a recent interview in her Presbyterian Towers apartment.

The orphanage she’s traveling to was established in a large, old house by a Kenyan who wanted to give children orphaned by AIDS a place to live, Ms. Stoddard said. They range in age from 6 to 16.

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What is her motivation?

“I suppose there is a spiritual thing there, but I’m not strictly religious,” she answered recently.

“God is love, whatever God is. And work is prayer. I want to use everything I have until I can’t use it anymore.”

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Original article

(Posted on January 20, 2005)

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