The Kingdom of Lethoso is a dichotomy. Tourists are amazed by it breathtaking views of mountains and valleys. But 70% of the country's population of 2 million, of which 300,000 are orphans, live in poverty.
Masease Masolanka lives in Mapoteng, a rural area about 70 kilometres from the capital, Maseru. Here, mountains and valleys stretch into a bright green landscape. But as Masaese looks down into the beautiful valley, she thinks about what's happened to her and her family over the last three years. In 2012, when she was already caring for her own three children, as well as her widowed daughter's three children, she learned of her sister-in-law’s death. Within days, she and her husband, Letseka, were left to care for his sister's three children. Their family grew from five to 11 in just a few short months.
The Masolanka extended family used to live in a one-room, mud-floored hut made of stones, where they cooked, ate and slept. "We had no toilet and the house was collapsing around us," says Masaese. "We tried to fix the house with corrugated iron sheets, but that didn't work."
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