I have been going through the
school’s finances over the years since we began and can only gasp with
astonishment at how far we have come. In 2015 we
started very small, with 60 children in a loaned building. Now we have 247 children in our own
purpose-built school and a regular income, which is generally fairly stable. All this has been done through your
help. First, friends and relatives, then
churches and charities started to help too.
The circle has widened through personal contact, not through NGO
lobbying. Most remarkably as I have very
little opportunity to visit the UK, almost all my contact has been over the
internet, which is very unreliable here in South Sudan.
![]() |
Our girls' football team just before winning their first ever match last November. |
Cece Primary School owes its
continued existence to all of you who have donated to the school and encouraged
me to persevere. I have always had a
great antipathy to money, which has made me a most unlikely fundraiser and
makes the results all the more surprising.
It is true that right now we are on
hold and the school is shut. The deaf
children have also had to return home. However,
eventually this will change. We will go
back and with great relief get cracking again to help our children out of the
grinding poverty of their backgrounds, hopefully changing the mindsets of the
local community along the way so that children are no longer treated as the
lowest thing that crawls, but as valued members of their families.
Through your help the teachers and
cooks continue to be paid. This will
help motivate them to remain loyal to our school rather than finding permanent
work elsewhere, which is very important in this difficult time when prices are
escalating and food is scarce. It is
also very important that when schools finally reopen, our teachers are able and
ready to teach again. All our staff will
also maintain a positive attitude to the school.
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Our deaf children on their way home after the closure of their schools due to Coronavirus. |
I can remember in 2013, when Pope
Francis had recently taken office, he spoke out against NGOs (including
Catholic ones) who broadcast money for their projects from on high with a
motivation of publicizing their own greatness.
I have seen for myself here in South Sudan, how short-term their vision
can be and how difficult it can be for local people to access the much
publicized help. A lot of the funds get
lost along the way due to bureaucratic processes, lack of supervision and
corruption. The money the NGOs give is
taken from across the world, often without the expressed wish of those paying,
as it comes from governments using their people’s taxes. There is no care for the individual, just a
lot of faceless numbers, with an occasional very sad ‘human story’ to give a
feel-good feeling. It is all about how
many millions of children across the world receive this, that or the
other. On the surface it looks
humanitarian, but there is a lack of love and care. The help given is rarely of a type to bring
South Sudan into a position of helping itself, but of continuing dependency.
A prime example of this cynical
approach is the Girls Education South Sudan (GESS) project, funded by the EU
and UKAID. We are told that the purpose
of this project is to encourage teenage girls to remain in education and avoid
early marriage. This is a serious issue
in South Sudanese society, driven by poor quality, expensive education, the
greed of families for large bride-prices, and the misery of teenage girls in
insupportable family circumstances where they are frequently beaten and
expected to work like slaves from morning to night. At school these girls under-perform because
they are always late, dog-tired and miserable.
Not surprisingly, a lot of these girls run away or look for a man to
take them away from their home situation.
The result is very high teenage pregnancy rates and girls jumping out of
the pan and into the fire by becoming neglected or battered wives of polygamous
men.
GESS believes that giving a small sum
of money to each girl from Primary 5 upwards will encourage them to remain in
school. Is that really the answer to the
situation I have described? How can it
be? It just makes GESS feel able to
report the huge number of girls reached.
The amount of money is only 2,200 SSP per girl, around $8. It will maybe buy some stationery and a couple
of packs of sanitary pads. That money is
nothing compared to school fees or bride-price, so will not motivate parents to
keep the girls in school. The answer to
the problem is not money but society change, which is much harder to
achieve.
The problems of teenage girls are
addressed at Cece Primary School by setting up a girls’ protection workshop,
with a supervising female teacher and peer mentors. These mentors raise any problems faced by the
girls so that the school can talk to parents and local chiefs to help address
the individual girl’s situation. This
approach does not take money. Instead it
takes a view that each child matters.
When we show love to our children they will respond, even if not
immediately.
I recently read a book called A Spirituality of Fundraising by Henri
Nouwen. I wanted to know how Henri
Nouwen could possibly see fundraising as something that has a religious
aspect. Ever since starting the school I
have been very worried by talking about or dealing with money; I try to live a
religious life and feared the financial side as bringing me down. I can strongly recommend this book. When I read it, I realized that without
knowing it, I was in fact already following some of Nouwen’s
recommendations. I am now going further
by talking to you about the role of supporters as Nouwen sees it, and as I see
it too.
Nouwen’s philosophy of fundraising is
to create a community of supporters and recipients all in relationship with
each other. In religious terms, each
donor or supporter and each recipient should be valued for themselves as
children of God’s Kingdom. The community
(in this case, the children, their families and the school staff) is God’s
Kingdom on earth. By donating or
interacting in any other way, supporters become part of that Kingdom. It is supposed to be a community of
love. The fundraiser is a go-between
facilitating that community.
I know that some of you are not
religious and may find this post difficult.
I apologise if you are offended. In
previous posts I have tried not to rub people’s noses in my religious views
while at the same time being honest about the motivation for my work here,
whether with the school or the deaf children.
I believe that all of you, our supporters,
are passionate about helping the children of our school and also the deaf
children going to school in Uganda. Let
us work together. I know that the
distance is huge between the UK and South Sudan, but let us feel our closeness
in spirit.
Love is something very thin on the
ground in both the UK and in South Sudan right now. Please continue to help our mission to our
children to be a light in the darkness of racism, isolationism, corruption and
abuse all of which affect both our countries.
I'm happy and happy to ma'di community for doing this, i can't imagine but finally we have reached to our goal. May the almighty God be with ur guys.
ReplyDeleteRegards
Maryin Oce Kure
Marathon continue
ReplyDelete