I have been very silent for the last month because I have been
in the UK, with a small detour to Ireland, looking for help for Cece Primary
School. During that time, Google refused
to recognise me as I was in the ‘wrong place’ and on the ‘wrong computer’,
making it impossible for me to edit my blog.
I have been particularly looking for funding for the
construction of a purpose-built school for which a local chief donated a large
piece of land. At the moment the land is
a sea of grass as we had not managed to raise the finances to build on it.
Construction of the new school is very urgent for several
reasons.
1) At the moment we are in a loaned building which only has
room for three classes; next year we intend to have four classes and there
simply isn’t room.
2) The owner of the current building wants us to leave so he
can make use of his building himself.
3) The chief donated the land to us several months ago and
is getting impatient to see action being taken.
He has warned us that if we do not start to build soon he will take the
land back.
I am delighted to tell you that wonders happened, thanks to
my former parish priest. I spoke at all
Sunday Masses one weekend. A collection
was taken of over £1000, and several parishioners have been in contact and
donated substantially since then. He
also introduced me to the trustees of a charity called the Sean Devereux Children’s Fund. Cece Primary School fully meets SDCF’s
criteria for funding, which is Africa, children and poverty. After telling them about the school, they kindly
agreed to allow us to make use of their charity status so that we can reclaim
25% taxes on donations made by UK tax-payers via the Gift Aid scheme. This will be done by asking donors to fill in
a Gift Aid form and send future donations to the Sean Devereux account instead
of my account. The trustees also decided
to make a donation from the fund of £5000 towards the school construction.
Many thanks to Father John Horn, the parish of St Barnabas
in East Molesey and the trustees of the Sean Devereux Children’s Fund. Thanks also to David Wolton of the Sudan
Volunteer Programme was also a valuable support as he helped me to meet some
potentially very useful future contacts.
Finally, thanks to Peter and Judith Leonard in Ireland, who have also
helped tremendously by donating a directory of potential donors and allowing me
to speak to interested people at their home.
They and one of their friends made donations to the school. The Leonards have been very active in the
Nimule area in the past and therefore have a great interest in helping in the
area generally.
I also met Pauline, a lady who is keen to come and spend a couple
of months at the school helping with teaching the younger children next
year. She said, ‘I have always wanted to
volunteer in Africa’. Pauline is an
experienced early years teacher. This,
of course, is highly dependent on what happens here in Nimule in the meantime,
as I have no wish to put her in danger.
In short, God smiled on my trip.
I have now arrived back in Nimule. People have welcomed me with almost literal
open arms, starting with the motorcycle taxi driver at the border who drove me
back home. The cry of ‘Welcome back!’ or
‘You were lost!’ greets me at every turn, which makes me feel very much
appreciated.
As mentioned in my last blog post, due to the civil war
situation which reached new heights in July causing a huge exodus of at least
200,000 people to the refugee camps in Uganda, all schools apart from Cece
Primary School closed. The majority of
our own pupils and staff also fled. We
therefore started a temporary Open Door policy to allow those children
remaining in Nimule to continue to attend school. We employed two new teachers and two new
cooks to replace those who had left.
I am glad to say that things are calmer in Nimule now. People are starting to drift back from the
refugee camps. Schools are gradually
reopening, so we are no longer the only school.
I expect the unregistered children taken in through our open door policy
to be able to return to their original schools very shortly, leaving space for
those children who are formally registered and meet the school’s official
criteria of families with HIV/AIDS, other disabilities and orphans,
particularly those unable to attend other schools due to lack of school fees. The school will be able to return to a more
normal teaching schedule and start preparing the children for end of year exams
in December, although it will be difficult to catch up.
I went straightaway to visit the school on the day I got
back. I found that school numbers had
risen to nearly 60, although many children are still from other schools rather
than our officially registered ones. However,
it was good to see quite a few of our original pupils who have returned from
the refugee camps.
HUMAES (who are a local NGO partnering with Cece) are
putting together a final building plan for the new school in consultation with
experienced builders and updating our bill of quantity which we originally
wrote in January. We currently envisage
a school with several blocks. One block
of four classrooms, another for kitchen, food storage and dining hall (doubling
as school hall) and a block for a library and school office. I have a large number of donated books, which
need to be made accessible to staff and children; the library is therefore
essential. We also want to order desks
and chairs, which up until now have been a dream too far. There is a huge amount of space, so we will plant
fruit trees, reserve an area for growing vegetables and allocate a space for a
football pitch (a much loved sport here).
At a later stage we want to create an outside play area with play
equipment and also build another classroom block.
As I am sure you can tell, I am feeling very positive about
the future of the school. As mentioned
in my last two blog posts, the local population are deeply unstable. They have had to uproot and flee so many
times that now they flee almost unthinkingly and out of habit. There is a serious need to demonstrate
stability. Building our school will send
a message to the locals, and particularly to those most impoverished that they
should stop running and let their children gain that all-important education so
they can help their families and local community in the future. When they see that we have been building while
they were ‘running’, I hope they will stop and think.
Please can I ask for your help to make our plans a
reality. A small monthly donation will
help a lot with our day to day running costs of staff wages, feeding, pencils
etc. Larger lump sums will go towards construction costs. If you
have already been donating to the school, please make sure you cancel your
payments to my account. In either
case please email me on rebeccamallinson1@hotmail.co.uk
so I can send you the Gift Aid form.
This applies whether or not you are a tax-payer. You will need to set up a new order to the
Sean Devereux account, whose details are on the Gift Aid form.
Please circulate this post as widely as possible. I have set up a Facebook page for the
school. It can be found by searching for
@nimule on Facebook. I will try to keep
it updated regularly, but this is dependent on internet access, which is
sketchy and expensive in Nimule.
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