Thursday, September 24, 2009

BANK Account

The Bank Account for BUILD A SCHOOL, BUILD A LIFE, having first applied almost 3 months ago, is finally OPEN!

Funds to date have been deposited.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Organisation's Bank Account

Today we applied with Nat West for a bank account through which to channel the funds that have, to date, been raised! Subject to approval, we should have details of the account within a week.

Funds raised to date total £217.25

Sunday, July 26, 2009

NELSON MANDELA


Nelson Mandela once said................

Education is the most powerful

weapon which you can use

to change the world.”


Can we change the world for just a few in WEST POKOT?


Every jouney starts with a single step............. let's take that first step!

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

NEW YOUTUBE VIDEO

I have just put together a new video/slideshow showing some of the children that it is hoped will be helped by setting up such an organisation as this one.

The link is.........



The music is RISE UP by YVES LAROCK.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

FOOD ALERT!!!



There is a boarding school which has been built near to the Turkwell Dam in West Pokot about 40 miles from Marich. In order to survive, this school relies entirely on charitable donations with many of the teachers working for nothing apart from board and lodging.

Herein lies the problem......... the students don't pay fees because their parents cannot afford fees. In fact many of the students are at the school because the school provides food............ education is a secondary benefit! Because the school relies entirely on donations, if the source of income dries up, the children starve............. it is as simple and as harsh as that.

The money has dried up, the food is running out and some of the most delightful, beautiful, grateful and polite children that I have been fortunate enough to meet will soon be without food.

How can anyone, in their right mind let children, like these, go hungry?

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Welcome to Jenga Shule

In a remote area of Kenya, about 500 km north of Nairobi, is a District known as West Pokot. It is inhabited by the Pokot people who are bordered in the north by the Turkana, the west by the Karamajong from Uganda, the east by the Samburu and Marakwet and to the south by the Kalenjin group of peoples in which the Pokot are placed.

The Pokot can be divided into two distinct groups: The Hill Pokot and the Plains Pokot. These groups can be subdivided into Pastoralists (Cow People), Cultivators (Corn People) and Nomads. The Cultivators account for about a quarter of the total population of Pokot with the other two sub-groups making up the balance. The population of Pokot speakers is estimated, most recently in 1997, as to be somewhere in the region of 150,000 although figures as high as almost twice that have been put forward.

I first visited the area in 1996 as part of my undergraduate studies at UEA and spent a week at the Marich Pass Field Studies Centre (MPFSC). I was immediately overcome by the beauty of both the area and the Pokot people themselves. I referred to Marich and the surrounding area as MY GARDEN OF EDEN.

Marich is a small village consisting of a small population, a number of DUKAS (local shops), a Primary School, a Police Post, a church and a clinic. It was also the site for the camp built to accommodate the workers who built the road from Marich northwards to Lodwar and beyond to Sudan.

The MPFSC is nestled in riverine forest on the banks of the Moruny River which flows through the Cherangani Hills and finally through the Marich Pass and northwards to Lake Turkana near Lodwar.

The MPFSC was the brainchild of the late Dr. David Roden. He wanted to build a field studies centre where students from all over the world could visit an area which is still relatively remote and continues to support a people who live as they have for centuries. At the same time they could learn from the Pokot people and live within their community from which David recruited staff for the centre. The staffing of the MPFSC together with the use of traditional methods of construction, utilising, whenever possible, locally produced produce, reducing, as much as possible, the environmental impact of the project on the surrounding area and limiting what had to be brought in to make his dream a reality made the centre a truly eco-friendly project.

In addition to offering once in a lifetime opportunities for students to visit a rapidly vanishing lifestyle he encouraged others to help change the lives of the Pokot people through the provision of wells, a maize mill, a school dormitory and more recently a school and a clinic. He also, personally, sponsored many local children to complete their education and many local people are eternally grateful to David for his help

It is vitally important for his work to continue and it is for this reason it has been decided to establish a charity in order to continue the work that he started. Through this others will be given the opportunity to go to school and to be provided with basic medical care................. some of the basic necessities that we, in the Western World, simply take for granted. These are, in West Pokot, a privilege for the few who are able to afford it and for others a mere pipe dream and for others the provision of schools and basic medical just does not exist.

The bottom line for the majority of people in West Pokot is that without education they cannot better themselves and aspire to a better quality of life. Without the provision of basic health care to treat pneumonia or malaria there will be no life................... this is a simple fact of everyday life for those living in West Pokot.

We can halp change their lives and save lives by raising funds or donating money to this worthy cause.

Just £3.50 will support a child through school for 3 months!

£10,000 will build a school or a clinic!













Build a School, Adopt a School