Growing up in a village near the shores of Lake Victoria in Tanzania, Wanzita Ally never seriously thought about getting on a plane and flying to America.

Her father had died when she was young, and she lived with her mother and grandmother, who were poor farmers.

The family depended on what they grew in their fields to eat.

But Wanzita loved school, and she did well. She was chosen as a class leader by her fellow students, and her teachers noted that she showed “good effort, behavior, and attendance,” despite going long periods without eating. She was determined not to let her family’s situation interfere with her education.

Two decades earlier, in the early 1990s, a Peace Corps volunteer named Brian Singer was teaching mathematics at a high school near Wanzita’s village when he got to know four siblings whose parents had died.

After Singer returned home to Minnesota, he talked to family and friends about helping those students with their school fees. The response was so great that he sponsored additional kids, and Project Zawadi  was born. To date, the nonprofit has sponsored some 650 students.

A few years ago, Project Zawadi began expanding its mission to help schools increase their educational reach, building classrooms and housing for teachers; installing toilets and computer labs; and setting up a vocational training center. One of the projects provided beds for a dormitory at Makongoro Secondary School, where Wanzita was a student. Wanzita herself received a school fee scholarship.

Project Zawadi’s local partner organization, Zinduka, contacted the nearby Rotary Club of Musoma (Zinduka’s director, Max Madoro, later joined that club) to help with the Makongoro project. But the collaboration with Rotary didn’t begin in earnest until Vicki Dilley, a Rotarian in Northfield, Minn., who is also a returned Peace Corps volunteer, came on board as director.

Last year, because of Dilley’s connection, North Star decided to see about finding a student in Tanzania for a one-way exchange. Singer and Madoro looked through their files and decided that Wanzita had the qualities that would help her adapt in America, even though she had never been far from home.

This kind of collaboration between Rotarians and former Peace Corps  volunteers is one reason the two organizations formalized their relationship in 2014. Both groups share goals of promoting better international understanding, enhancing global awareness, and empowering communities to create lasting improvements in education, economic development, health, and more. “It’s a really natural collaboration,” says Singer. “It connects concerned and caring people – Rotarians – with people who have a specific connection to a village or a group of people.”

Dilley sees it the same way. “For my husband and me,” she says, “it always felt like Rotary was an extension of what we wanted to do in the Peace Corps.”

But Wanzita couldn’t embark on her journey without a passport. To get one, she needed a birth certificate. In order to get a birth certificate, her mother needed a birth certificate. So, accompanied by Madoro, Wanzita and her mother flew to Dar es Salaam, where they spent several weeks obtaining the necessary papers and stamps for her journey across the world.

Wanzita has embraced her experience – although when she got to Minnesota in the fall of 2016, she couldn’t see how anyone found their home, because to her, they all looked the same. “I couldn’t believe how many cars there were, and the way the roads were built over each other, and the buildings – how nicely they were built.”

But over time, the strange new things seemed less strange.

At her high school, where she spent her senior year, she joined the cross-country team and signed up for an ambitious load of classes, including child psychology, accounting, and biology.

“Now,” she says, “I am used to everything – except cheese.”

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