Well, this is our last week in Kasigau and although we are ready to travel around Kenya for a bit, it suddenly seems like there is too little time and too much to accomplish before we leave. We have been on a game drive and Ken had a run in with some elephants, three intens, and a rental car. There are many good stories and photos, but no good way to post to the web and no time to organize.
The best news this week is that the primary schools where we have been working have just completed their second term exams, and the students identified 6 weeks ago as "slow learners" have shown greatly improved perfomance. In schools where teachers have worked side by side with our interns, some students have actually doubled their scores, and exam scores are the most important single factor in detemining a child's educational future.
The three young men we have been sponsoring at Moi (with support of many blog readers) are all lovely guys who would like to continue their education at university to become doctors and engineers. (John I think would like to pursue a career in tourism management, a 2 year program.) We would like to support them because they have consistently performed in the top of their class and are very hard workers, often rising at 3am fo 2 exta hours of studying before morning preps begin. We are interested to know how many people might be interested in contributing even small amounts of financial support, and also any ideas you may have for how to set priorities. For instance, we could collect as much sponsorship as possible and divide it between the three of them equally, or offer half to the highest performer and split the remaining half between the other two, or...Univesity is more expensive then high school in Kenya, but still inexpensive by American standards.
I know you have to have a Google account to post comments, so if anyone would like to support a few bright university students in Kenya you can let me know at Krister1@comcast.net. We are also collecting names and information for potental high school sponsorships, especially for girls. School year starts in January, so we have time to get organized.
Thanks for reading the blog. I know the appeal for funds is a bit uncomfortable fo me, so if it is the same for you, just ignore that last paragraph. We are experiencing a bit of "compassion fatigue" ourselves. We're heading for Lamu on Friday and it is a tourist town so maybe there is better internet options. I'm ready for a real vacation with some free time!
Kris
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Students at Moi High School
Many of the blog readers are among the group of sponsors who have been supporting tuition and fees for students at Moi High School in Rukanga, the largest of the Kasigau communities. One student John, graduated in December 2009; 3 are in Form 4 (seniors) and will graduate in December 2010; two are in Form 1 (freshmen), having just started high school in January of this year. I’m including a photo of myself with the students still attending Moi, and individual photos of each of the six our group of friends, family, and students have been supporting with annual donations. From left...Holiness, Sylvia, Kris, Phillipe, Beja, & Albert
John is the first student we sponsored, beginning in January of 2006. He graduated with a high school diploma last December and was contemplating what to do with his future very seriously the entire time we were in Kasigau. John has a single mother, grandparents in their 80s, and three younger siblings, so as the eldest responsible son he has had many family obligations during his studies. As a result his grades were lower than anticipated, which has limited his options for continuing his education. The Kenyan system is quite regimented, with exams in all subjects each term, and one set of final exams at the end of high school that determines an average grade for the 4 years. And like American higher education, in Kenya each major or program has entrance requirements. John's family commitments and his mother's illness resulted in poorer performance than he was happy with, so he is returning to high school because he wants to repeat and improve his final exam grade and go on to university. Way to go, John!
Phillipe, Albert, and Beja are the other three young men our family and friends have been supporting since 2007. They are in their last year and all are very good students. All three are from very poor families and quite appreciative of the support. These three often get up two hours earlier than required to have extra time for studying. This means they are getting up at 3am, since the entire school is up for morning preps at 5am! They have all impressed the head teacher and the headmaster, and were lovely to meet with…Ken and I have committed to seeking support for these three to continue at a public university.
Beja (right above) wants to be an electrical or mechanical engineer, and has shown strong academic performance, always in the top 10 of his class of 80 since Form I. He comes from a family of 6, with two parents who sometimes work at manual jobs but are currently unemployed. There is no work for the majority of Kasigau residents; the best estimate I’ve seen is that about 60 in 1,000 have paying positions. The remainder farm small plots and hope for rain so there is a crop for market. Phillipe has two older brothers and one younger brother who is in class 6.
Albert has an interest in electronics and wants to study electrical engineering at university. He has also consistently also performed at the top 10 of the class, and is a very serious student. Albert has a 5 year old brother, and his mother is a single parent who has moved away to Voi for work. As a result, Albert lives with his grandmother in Rukanga when not boarding at Moi.
Sylvia and Holiness are getting used to being away from home and living at Moi, and their first term marks came back as average. Our host at the banda, Abs, gave them a pep talk about the importance of working harder and performing well. He will be monitoring the performance of each student at the end of each term, so that sponsors’ support can be contingent on performance. The girls are also from families with very low incomes. Sylvia has three brothers and one sister, and lives with her parents in Bungule when not at school. Holiness lives with her great-grandmother and her grandmother, having been orphaned at an early age. She has three sisters and one brother, and is a very serious young woman. It took me three weeks to get to her smile back at me!
All students we have supported will need support to even consider continuing to university, and all are well-known at the school as being very motivated and hard workers. The government has started subsidizing secondary school, and Moi now enrolls “day students” from neighboring villages, for $150/year (versus $450 for boarding students). It’s over an hour’s walk from Bungule, though, and over half that from Jora. The matatu busses take student riders for free, and they leave at 5am from Bungule, and it is very heartwarming to see everyone making room in any way possible to support education in the community With our limited time left here we are struggling to set priorities for continued sponsorships. There are certainly more students and teachers in need at all levels than are possible to support, but on the other hand $150 goes a long way toward giving a village student a future beyond poaching and burning charcoal for livelihood here.
Monday, July 5, 2010
Flora and Fauna
Kasigau is beautiful and very diverse with plants and animals, all living in the many ecological niches of the mountain from which the area takes its name. There are two tame cats at the banda, and almost every evening a large troop of baboon on the rocks up and behind us. Ken likes to sit up there and wait for them to come by, for a close up view. They are probably so interesting because they seem so human. There is an abundance of small creatures, of which we have not one good photo: rock hyrax squirrel and fox like creatures, mongoose, and very many beautiful birds. Some very large turtles have crawled by; many lizards large and small scurry around; we have seen some very quick snakes; and there are more insects (ants of all sizes, scorpions, cockroaches, spiders, huge grasshoppers, dragon flies, praying mantis) than most of us are used to. And of course the various noisy monkeys that live close by.
There are huge baobab trees, many different thorny trees and shrubs, cactus, delicate and colorful flowers, and quite a few fruit trees. Much of the vegetation looks like Arizona with cactus, acacia trees, and many thorny bushes. The “shamba” (farms) grow primarily maize and also pumpkins and melon. There are a great many mystery fruits, flowers, and vegetables, and a few known favorites. All in all with the many shades of green, the red dirt, the blue sky and white clouds, Kasigau is a very beautiful and interesting place when it comes to plants and animals.
We have been on game drive and seen many large animals, which I will try to post separately.
Kris
The Banda
I’ve had a few questions via email about our daily life here in the Kasigau bush. The banda where we live is owned and operated by Ibrahim (Abs) Jumapili. He built it just a couple years ago, and like almost all structures in Kasigau, the construction is of timbers harvested from the local forests, bricks fired from red dirt on the immediate premises, and thatch from indigenous grasses. He has imported stone from a quarry also in Taita Taveta, the area between here and the coast of the Indian Ocean.
We have fresh water from the mountain for drinking, washing, and showering, and power for lights and recharging batteries, depending on the weather (no cloud cover = more power). There is a separate building with two loos and two showers, with warm water on occasion. At night the loo building and the paths are lit by kerosene lamps if there has not been enough sun for power to be stored.
The food is fresh from the market in Voi each Tuesday (a two hour ride on a “matatu” van) and our cook Lucy is very talented at making it stretch all week. We have chicken a couple times each week, lots of cabbage and kale cooked African style, chapatti, beans, maize (corn), toast, pancakes, the works. In town the menu for lunch is fruit, chapatti bread, and beans. And always “chai”, the Kenyan black tea with milk that some of us have become addicted to and others never drink.
We each have a bed, Ken and I in one room, away from the main facility, three women interns in one room, two in another, and Jesse (the lone male intern) and John (our Kenyan student) in a separate room. Each bed has a mosquito net but not everyone uses theirs as it is a cumbersome and not always comfortable procedure to get in and out of bed.
As one photo shows, the banda is quite private and isolated at the end of a road/path. We mostly hear birds and monkeys and baboons and bats that make a pinging sound, very rarely a motorized vehicle. It is about a 20 minute walk to Bungule, and we are often accompanied by school children as we walk to and from the village. In East Africa greetings are a major aspect of the social structure, and we have been learning all the appropriate greetings in Taita (the mother tongue of the Kasigau region) so that we can participate. Life here is simple and good, beautiful and friendly.
We are all excited to be headed to Mombasa, and next week I’ll post about that trip, and try to introduce the high school students we have been sponsoring, the town of Voi, and more local news.
Kris
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