Meet 10th grade student and West Point Adolescents Leading an Intense Fight Against Ebola (A-LIFE) group member Jessica Meufville, 17, in Monrovia, #Liberia. Jessica was staying with her parents in the West Point area of Monrovia when #Ebola came into the country. In August of 2014, West Point was quarantined after Ebola patients escaped from a holding center. Jessica remembers finding out in the morning, since it occurred during the nighttime. She and other young girls from West Point were part of a program headed by UNICEF. These girls decided to meet at the West Point Women’s Center. Their first meeting was on Saturday and she remembers about 25 people being present. This is when they formed A-LIFE. Jessica found information about Ebola was quite different than what was being spread around. They ended up doing the awareness campaigns for 6 months. Now, she is back in school and hopes to become a journalist to “help speak for the speechless.” She will also participate in a future UNICEF program that will be teaching diverse skills. Jessica says, “We were trained [on Ebola prevention], and we got a lot of information about Ebola that was different from [what] people here were saying. After the training, we went door-to-door to tell people how to protect themselves. It was challenging. A lot of people never accepted our message and it used to make me feel bad. Our supervisor used to always encourage us and it was that motivation that kept me moving to go on to talk to more people so more lives could be saved.” #MyEbolaStory © UNICEF/UNI200660/Grile

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unicefのインスタグラム(unicef) - 1月8日 01時04分


Meet 10th grade student and West Point Adolescents Leading an Intense Fight Against Ebola (A-LIFE) group member Jessica Meufville, 17, in Monrovia, #Liberia. Jessica was staying with her parents in the West Point area of Monrovia when #Ebola came into the country. In August of 2014, West Point was quarantined after Ebola patients escaped from a holding center. Jessica remembers finding out in the morning, since it occurred during the nighttime. She and other young girls from West Point were part of a program headed by UNICEF. These girls decided to meet at the West Point Women’s Center. Their first meeting was on Saturday and she remembers about 25 people being present. This is when they formed A-LIFE. Jessica found information about Ebola was quite different than what was being spread around. They ended up doing the awareness campaigns for 6 months. Now, she is back in school and hopes to become a journalist to “help speak for the speechless.” She will also participate in a future UNICEF program that will be teaching diverse skills. Jessica says, “We were trained [on Ebola prevention], and we got a lot of information about Ebola that was different from [what] people here were saying. After the training, we went door-to-door to tell people how to protect themselves. It was challenging. A lot of people never accepted our message and it used to make me feel bad. Our supervisor used to always encourage us and it was that motivation that kept me moving to go on to talk to more people so more lives could be saved.” #MyEbolaStory © UNICEF/UNI200660/Grile


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