Moses Mwaura considers himself the luckiest kid in the world.
The Kenyan boy was only 5 years old in 2010 when he first flew to Minnesota from the slums of Nairobi's Mathare Valley, where row upon row of makeshift shanties dull the landscape. He came to the Twin Cities for life-changing surgery that straightened his crossed eyes and corrected his vision.
Seven years later Moses and his family are back, visiting the friends they made on that first trip and enduring Minnesota's frosty winter wonderland.
The Edina Rotary Club hosted Moses and his guardians, David and Subira Waithaka, at a luncheon Thursday at the Edina Country Club. After he turns 13 on Tuesday, the club's members plan to host a birthday bash for him.
"I'll get to eat a lot of cake," he said, bouncing a soccer ball given to him by a Rotarian.
Much has changed since Moses first came to Minnesota, when he captured a lot of eyes and hearts. ("I really feel like I'm the king of the United States," he said Thursday, reflecting on his fame.)
He is no longer the small boy with crooked eyes from the slums. He is now tall and skinny, with shiny cheeks and a toothy smile.
Moses is in sixth grade at the Green Garden School outside Nairobi, his private education paid for by the Edina Rotary. He has developed several talents, like playing soccer, hockey (an unintentional nod to Minnesota) and several musical instruments, including the keyboard and drums.