Klicks Africa Foundation Builds A House For Orphaned Girls With Special Needs

 

 

Klicks Africa Foundation, a center for children with autism builds a house for 3 orphaned girls with special needs at Esiam in the Central Region.

 

“The House That Love Built: Three Special Needs Girls, One Mother’s Spirit, and a Nation’s Heart”

Beyond the noise of daily survival and the rush of ordinary life, there stands a house.

 

But this is no ordinary house. It was not built from blueprints drafted in boardrooms. It did not rise from a government mandate. It was born from heartbreak and raised, brick by brick, by compassion.

Three little Sisters. Each living with a neurodivergent condition – Special Needs.

 

Their world was held together by the loving hands of their mother—who fed them, bathed them, understood their nonverbal cues, and fought fiercely for their right to simply exist in peace. Then, without warning, she was gone.

In that moment, the girls became more than just children with special needs. They became survivors—of grief, of neglect, and of a system that too often overlooks the vulnerable. The streets could have swallowed them. The headlines could have forgotten them. But something extraordinary happened.

Our own Mary Amoah Kuffour, founder of Klicks Africa Foundation who had once fought for her own daughter Nana Yaa’s right to thrive with autism, heard about the girls. Her heart broke—but it didn’t stop there. It moved. It mobilized.

 

Mary, through her work with Klicks Africa Foundation, launched a call on the My Journey with Autism Facebook page. Not for charity. But for humanity. For justice. For the shared responsibility of a society to protect its most delicate treasures.

 

And the world answered. Donors sent their widows mite acrossthe globe. A mason waived his fees. A carpenter returned after hours to finish roofing the structure.

A teacher donated books. A seamstress made curtains. Strangers became family and when almost all hope of finishing this project was lost

HEALTH AND HUMANITARIAN AID FOUNDATION came to our aid to help complete the project.

 

Today, these sisters live in a home made of love. It is simple but sacred. A place where autism is not feared. Where their silence is not mistaken for emptiness. Where their movements, once labeled “weird,” are understood as expressions of joy, frustration, or curiosity. It is a place where they are safe. But their story is not the only one.

Right now, somewhere in Ghana, there is another mother exhausted from carrying her special child without help. Another father confused by his child’s delayed speech. Another child labeled “stubborn” or “possessed” simply because the world does not understand her wiring.

We owe them more than silence. This is a national call to consciousness.

 

To the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Gender and Social Protection, corporate Ghana, faith institutions, celebrities, civil society—this is your time to act. Autism and other special needs conditions are not curses.

They are human conditions. And every child deserves a chance.

 

The Klicks Africa Foundation continues to support these girls and many others with therapy, special education, meals, clothing, and love. But love alone cannot buy medicine. Or pay teachers. Or build more homes.

 

So today, we ask: Will you partner with us?

Will you sponsor a special child’s education?

Will you give so a caregiver can keep doing this sacred work?

Contact us: +233 24 498 8977

Email: klicksafricafoundation@gmail.com

Facebook: My Journey with Autism

Let the house that love built remind us—no child should walk their journey alone. Especially not the ones who need us most.

About Dickson Boadi

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