Monday 12 August 2013

Medical Sponsorship

Asante Mpikamezo (right in the photo) is a committed health worker in Ngala
Clinic, working long and irregular hours in difficult conditions, with
limited resources and medical supplies. He wants to advance his own training
by taking a Diploma in Clinical Medicine so that he can serve the community
better: to be allowed to take the course, he has to commit to staying with
the Ministry of Health, so he won't join a Brain Drain!

But there's a problem: the fees total £730 per semester, and the course is 3
semesters. We've scoured the Web, looking for sources of funding, to no
avail. Asante has the college place... he just needs help with funding. If
you know of any organisation / individual who can help, please get in touch!
Your message is ready to be sent with the following file or link
attachments:

20110826_2.jpg


Note: To protect against computer viruses, e-mail programs may prevent
sending or receiving certain types of file attachments. Check your e-mail
security settings to determine how attachments are handled.

Sunday 11 August 2013

Khuuyu School

Khuuyu School teacher’s house properly roofed

 

School communities build their own houses for teachers, meaning the government will supply a trained teacher and pay their wages. However, very few communities can afford the cement for mortar, so dambo sand is used instead. Corrugated iron is also unaffordable, so many houses are grass-thatched. The better the house, the more likely the school is to attract a good teacher, so when possible, we help with roofing. This is Khuuyu’s first teacher’s house and Moffat Banda, our building supervisor, reroofed it over a 3 days period.

 

Wednesday 7 August 2013

Widows' Craftmaking Group

Curio & Craftmaking.

Alex Ndipo (extreme left in photo), a local carver and supporter of widows’ & orphans’ groups in nearby Nkhata Bay, recently approached me with a view to setting up a similar group in our Ngala village. With the support of the local Senior Group Village Headman Kamkondo, we would find accommodation for a craftmaking group recruited from local widowed women with no other means of support. Their products would be sold through the various tourist outlets to which Alex has access, bringing back the proceeds for these women to improve their standard of living. It’s in its infancy, this project, but my role, through MEL, will be to support with ideas, my own skills, and materials I’ll source in the UK whilst there. It may become possible to extend the benefits of this to other members of the community. Volunteers interested in bringing their own skills to this project or donors wishing to contribute towards buying beads, jewellery items (earring hooks and the like)... please contact me! CAH

Sponsors and 'sponsees'

Much of my time has also been spent strengthening the relationship between our generous sponsors and those individuals their generosity supports. Lettina Khonje, photographed here on a cold morning, has had both eyes removed to prevent her retinal blastoma spreading to her brain. A kind sponsor has provided the funds to enable her to go to Nkhotakota School for the Blind. Her grandmother is illiterate and her mother has had minimal education, but, hopefully, Lettina’s education will be better than that.

 

Mercy, a deaf girl (as a result of malaria in early childhood) has been sponsored for some years at Mua School for the Deaf. Aged 16, she has been set up in a tailoring business with her mother so that they can be independent, self-sufficient, and Mercy has a profession in keeping with her disability.

 

Other children at Dwasulu Community Day Secondary School are sponsored by individuals who have received news of their ‘sponsees’. At a presentation ceremony, later this month, they will also be given learning materials and their school fees will be handed over to the treasurer. Attainment and attendance are also monitored: failure to maintain acceptable standards means sponsored pupils lose their sponsorship to more worthy candidates – there’s no shortage!

MEL 2013 updates

MEL 2013 without teams, for the first time ever (Does your school want to take part? Get in touch asap!!), has felt strange. The communities here have missed the groups visiting their villages, getting to know Malawian ways, working in the schools. My time has been spent in various ways (see Chaboli School under ‘Schools’), including trying to get this maize mill working for the community benefit again. It was donated by a volunteer agency, but unfortunately came with no manual, instructions or training. As a result, its maintenance has been sorely neglected... and it broke down. Alex and I have been working on basic stuff like greasing, cooling, cleaning, but the pulley wheel has been distorted through misuse and has now had to go to Lilongwe to the only engineering workshop capable of restoring it to useable condition. Hopefully, it’ll be up and running before I leave on 25th August: villagers walk for miles with their maize to be ground; this would ease their journeys as well as bringing an income to the villagers. CAH

Monday 29 July 2013

New pictures! - projects still going ahead

Malawi Education Link is still busy keeping projects going in rural areas. Schools are benefiting from the funds donated with new classroom blocks being built.

Sponsored students are also using the generous support of people in the UK to continue secondary school.

Have a look at the array of pictures in the "Schools" section of the website!

Thursday 31 January 2013

STOP PRESS

CHIGUMUKIRE SCHOOL lost the roof off one of its classroom blocks in last night’s powerful thunderstorm. We don’t have the funds to restore it, which means those pupils’ education will have to stop until the rains do, in April sometime. Any donations to help us put the roof back on would be much appreciated! Caroline (31.1.13)