A diary of an experiment in social entrepreneurship

Archive for November, 2007

The Best Greeting Cards Ever!

I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday! We celebrated Thanksgiving here in Tanzania by having a nice Indian dinner at the Impala Hotel in Arusha. (Tandoori chicken and samosas makes for a great substitute for turkey and mashed potatoes.) We’ve been extremely busy here working on several projects before the children leave for their holiday break next week. I can’t believe how quickly the time has passed!

Here’s a quick recap of what’s been going on:

  • Land Purchase: Mama Lucy has just received her NGO bank account with Barclay’s so that she can go forward with purchasing the land for the new school site. As you might imagine, the process is quite different, and quite difficult here. There is no MLS or Zillow to search for available properties and land values, and much of the land is still on tribal lands where an elder must approve of any land transactions. I’ve been getting a crash course in Tanzanian real estate but let’s just say I won’t be applying for a Tanzanian realtor license anytime soon. We’re hoping to put a down payment on the land by early next week if all goes according to plan.
  • Greeting Cards: I’m extremely excited to announce that we’ve finally put our greeting cards up for sale on our CafePress store today! Pius, Naomi and Faith who are pictured as snowflakes on the card below have told me to insist that you buy some. This was great fun from the outset – we had several photo shoots with the kids and they had so much fun wearing the costumes and designing the artwork for the cards. Remember that all proceeds from the sale of their cards goes directly to supporting Shepherds Junior in rebuilding their school. Let it SnowWe’ve got two different cards available and I can’t thank Fineline Graphics & Design enough for their generous support in helping us design these cards. I can’t wait to show you what we have in store for Valentine’s Day!
  • Postcards: The Class 3 children were taught a photography lesson by a professional photographer, Eoin Vincent. Mr. Vincent brought 2 digital cameras that were donated to the school through the generosity of Olympus. The children were delighted to learn how to use the cameras and some of the children were holding one for the very first time. The children have been taking turns checking out the cameras each night so that they can take photographs. Some of their photographs will be made into postcards that will be sold in some of the local outlets in town. BaobabWe took a few of the kids on safari this weekend to help jumpstart their photo collection – here’s a picture taken by Leah Albert, 9 years old of a Baobab Tree. I think she may have found her calling.
  • Pen Pal Letters: We brought a few Pen Pal letters written by 2nd grade students from Holland Elementary in Satellite Beach, Florida to some of the children at Shepherds Junior. Some of the letters are hilarious! Tyler from Holland Elementary asked whether the children ride elephants to school and Zoe Monk asked if she could get help with her math homework. We’re bringing back equally funny responses from the children here at Shepherds – hopefully we’ve just planted the seeds to a lifetime of correspondence and friendship.
  • The Big Debut: The faculty and students of Shepherds have started rehearsing for their first-ever fundraising performance! Their performance will be held at Via Via Cultural Café in Arusha, on Friday, November 30 at 4 p.m. and admission is Tsh 3,000 (roughly $3 USD). The children are really excited about the opportunity to perform in public and this is a wonderful opportunity for the school to begin fundraising for themselves. Just today, one of the parents stopped in and picked up 10 tickets to sell at a meeting she was attending. I can’t wait to see just how many people show up!
  • Storybank: Since we’re hoping to share some of the stories of the parents, children, and teachers of Shepherds, we’ve been making unannounced home visits to some of their homes this past week. I can’t even begin to describe to you how amazing an experience it has been to learn about some of their situations. We’ve interviewed a grandfather who uses the income from a few banana trees in his backyard to care for his orphan granddaughter, a mother living with HIV, and families with two white-collar incomes all living within a few blocks of each other. We’ll be posting their stories on our site in the coming weeks but I wanted to share one story with you now:

Sayuni, who appears on our “Peace on Earth” card, is a 6-year-old orphan who attends Shepherds Junior free of charge. She lives in an orphanage a few blocks away from Shepherds Junior, where we visited her last week. There, we met Mama Ana, a woman who couldn’t be older than about 20, who single-handedly – and without any pay – cares full-time for Sayuni and 10 other orphans, ages 3-15. While we asked for some details about where Sayuni came from, and what happened to her parents, Mama Ana knew very little, except that she was brought to the orphanage by someone who attended her mother’s funeral. Like over 1 million orphans in Tanzania, Sayuni has lost both of her parents. A Shepherds Junior, though, she attends school in an environment that doesn’t brand her with a mark of poverty or shame, in a uniform that is washed regularly by her teacher, Rachel, to ensure that little Sayuni fits in with her peers.

This is, for me, the most compelling thing that differentiates this school from many others in the area: it does not isolate the poor and orphaned nor segregate children of greater means. Instead, Shepherds Junior is a unique place where children from disparate backgrounds can learn from and grow with one another.

I hope you’ll continue to support our efforts to build a new school for Sayuni and so many others like her.

Til next time…

The Long Journey

A note from Mama Lucy:

“I will be more than happy when I’ll be able to make even a slight change in my community.” That was the cry of my heart before September 2003. I love the children very much; I have to do something for them. Education is the key to their success.

In our country, good schools that offer a high-quality standard of education are in high demand; it seems like a luxurious thing. Poor parents cannot afford to pay school fees for their children for such schools. Most of them are living on less than $2 USD per day! The three major problems that hinder development in our country are poverty, disease and ignorance. When starting Shepherds Junior, I said to myself, “Let me see what I can do so as to fight ignorance which will help to fight the other two.”

On September 8, 2003 our journey started with ten kids and two teachers. A month later, the number of children increased to 23. Bearing in mind that we started our journey using a hired truck (i.e., rented premises), it was not an easy task! Since the school had no capital, I took money from my small poultry business and boutique to provide the school rent and running costs. Parents, friends and all the community around me were very happy with my work and they encouraged me. Little kids changed within a very short period of time. The number increased – now to over 150!

Though Cross Cultural Solutions (CCS) has now been closed in Arusha, the organization will never be forgotten by our community, and especially by Shepherds Junior School . Through CCS, we were able to meet and collaborate with different volunteers, among them are these amazing people: Stacey, Sanjay, Diane and Pat. They saw for themselves, carried us in their hearts and took action with their tireless efforts. I’m really happy that the heavy truck I’ve been pulling myself now has more than one driver – Epic Change in the US and Shepherds Foundation, the NGO I’m founding here in Tanzania , whose Board also supports our work. Through their fundraising efforts, Epic Change is working to ensure that fuel is available for our truck.

On our way, on August 10th of this year, our truck had a minor accident: the rented property on which our school resides was sold. But fortunately, Epic Change is helping us to repair our own truck by fundraising and loaning us funds for buying our own land and rebuilding our classrooms. That is incredible! In the midst of all this, we were also hit with another accident; on November 7th 2007, the new owner informed me that we should be able to vacate the property by early February 2008. He has planned to demolish the school and build a hotel.

I am hoping that you will support Epic Change to by making a donation to help us move quickly to address these new developments. Our journey is still long.

With your donations, we will be able to move from our hired truck which is not safe into a new truck of our very own, and we’ll continue on our journey. I’m sure one day we will reach our destination, and reach our goal: to change the lives of children in this poor community by giving them a high-quality education at an affordable cost and provide a place for orphans and needy children. It can be done if we each play our part.

Asante sana (thank you very much),

Mama Lucy Kamptoni

Gratitude

Celebrating Thanksgiving in Africa is an incredible gift; it’s a holiday that we celebrate nearly daily here as we’re reminded constantly how fortunate we truly are.  Today, in commemoration of the US holiday, the third graders at Shepherds Junior taught us another lesson in gratitude as they shared with us the simple things for which they are thankful.  I thought as you sit down to your turkey, you too might like to be reminded of the simple gifts that the universe has granted even the smallest among us – so click here to see what the kids shared.  (You may have to tilt your head a little to view Sanjay’s avante garde camera work, but who among us couldn’t stand to look at the world from a fresh perspective?)

Life is good.  Happy Thanksgiving.

Check back tomorrow for a note from Mama Lucy . . .