The needs of the children of Tanzania are immeasurable by western standards. Deplorable living conditions, malaria, HIV/AIDS, all have contributed to an inhumane standard of living and we must help. Tumaini Children’s Foundation is a Canadian, not for profit, charitable organization dedicated to the care, support and education of orphaned and needy children in and around the village of Usa River, (near Arusha) Tanzania.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Saturday, April 6, 2013
Volunteers of Tumaini
May I start by wishing all a very happy and loved filled
Easter holiday. I unfortunately fell ill
for Easter (I am fine now), but our Tumaini family enjoyed mass/church/mosque
services, celebrated pamoja (together) and enjoyed the blessings and gifts of
many of you whom love and support us here.
Ahsante sana for that . . .
Most of us are healthy.
The rains are intense when they come and they come frequently now (thank
God for we have suffered drought in recent years) and the air is left with a cool
dampness which breeds that dreaded mafua (flu).
Many of the children struggle with it now, but otherwise we are well and
the months of April, August and December are holidays for primary schools and
so all of our primary students are home with the exception of Haradali students
who will join us this weekend. Children
are attending tuition (extra study) to help us continue to improve academically. They attend class in the mornings (lunch is
at 1:00 p.m.) and after that we PLAY!!
Weather permitting we are out playing football or some other activity
and if the rain comes it is CRAFT TIME!!
We may squeeze a movie in also or dancing . . .
Now, I would be remiss if I didn’t precede this with the
disclaimer that I WILL FORGET SOMEONE!
Forgive me in advance please, for it is not my intention to leave anyone
unappreciated and I am not always here to witness your wonderful contributions
. . . but we are VERY grateful for our Tumaini volunteers.
Having been pre-forgiven for missing a deserving
supporter (please) may I share just a bit about a few of the wonderful people
who have given their time, their efforts and their hearts to us here at Tumaini
. . . we’ve had some extraordinary people enter our gates . . . Michael McCann and Mama Rebecca and
Dada Rachel from Australia who not only have returned as a family, bringing
their hearts and skills (Michael organized and was part of our second
Kilimanjaro summit, raising money for Tumaini with every step), and has established
Tumaini Australia, soon to be a registered charity, in support of all the good
we try to do here for our children . . . oh, AND they sponsor Gerehad!
To Cindy Pichette who spent hundreds of hours building
our website, thank you! To Dave and
Jackie Egles of BC who are owed an enormous debt of thanks for not only
sponsoring Kelvin and Connie and taking Kelvin to Canada for an extended and
very educational visit (Connie will go when she is older), but to Dave and his team
who also installed our solar generated power system so that when the lights go
out, WE are not in the dark! We
immediately became very spoiled and hardly notice when electricity is lost! (It
is usually a volunteer from across the street who comes to tell us THEY are in
the dark . . . we look up and realize that ours is the only house in sight with
the lights on!) Dave and friends Mike,
Dave, and Paul were our third team to climb Kilimanjaro in support of Tumaini!
To Bibi Pat who brought not only her teaching but medical
and psychiatric expertise and visited and loved us here TWICE, thank you so
much!
Mariel Goodman from Michigan, USA and her father Tom, an
ER nurse, for joining us and updating our medical supply cupboard and tending
to all sorts of nasties, and mother Diane and sister Robyn, and extended and
church families who have embraced us at Tumaini, helping to support Christina
and Mary and have returned (and will this summer) return again to Tumaini as a
family . . . karibuni tena.
And what about our precious Mathilde who has come and
taught our children, bringing her entire family for a second visit, and Jenna
who spent a month teaching Latifa the first half of the alphabet and became her
long time sponsor, and Sean (who organized and successfully summited on our
FIRST Tumaini Kilimanjaro climb, and Milou and Minke (who joined us here with
the hope of making a real difference and HAS, for the lives of two little
girls, Mulki and Busainer and their HIV+ Bibi).
And recently we’ve been gifted with Mr. Jake Burnett,
Headmaster of Glenlyon Norfolk School in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
(Kelvin attended this school while visiting), supporting teachers and Class 6
students, and, additionally, Mr. Burnett’s Victoria “Oddfellows”, who donated
the money needed for us to outfit a Chemistry classroom with laboratory
materials (they were trying to learn about chemistry and microscopes, etc. from
a photograph), chemicals, models and TEXTBOOKS!
We are supporting a wonderful volunteer teacher who is providing exam
writing students with much needed knowledge (the students had not seen a
science teacher this year, until her arrival) and part of the money donated is
helping her with travel costs! We are so
very grateful for your kindness Mssrs. Oddfellows of Victoria and to Mr.
Burnett and GNS for the enormous future plans we are building together for a
mutual and continuous relationship with our two schools!!
How do we say thank you to a young lady (Kris) who,
knowing she was coming to Africa (but not knowing exactly where), simply wanted
to raise money she suspected would go to a good cause somewhere and, bolstered with
support from her mother and father and friends ended up MAKING and selling
HUNDREDS of SPRING ROLLS, gifting us with 10,000,000 shillings towards our new
school! Ahsante Sana!
To my Wing Girl, Korosho, for simply picking up whatever
needed picking, wiping what needed wiping, packing, unpacking, organizing,
reorganizing, loving, hugging, bandaging, well, you get the picture . . . and
still having the time for some girl talk . . . ahsante sana dada . . .
To Valentin and Jenny, psychiatric nurses in Belgium, who
joined us here for two months and sewed, (Rebecca you will LOVE Jenny),
painted, repaired or constructed just about everything around here, thank you! And a special thank you from Baba Steve when
he had to race back to North America to care for Amanda and Valentin stepped in
and took over HIS projects! Thank you!! Additionally,
thank you for sharing your own special gifts (as “mature” volunteers) for which
I am truly grateful.
Mama Lizbeth loved us daily! |
To Kathy Hoey a retired teacher from Ontario, Canada for
bringing her remarkable teaching skills to our first graders for January and
February . . . and to Mama Lizbeth for your love, your never ending clothing
repairs, your chocolate!! Thank you so
very much!
To Tine (in yellow) and Faye from Belgium, who have reached out to a
group of families left homeless after they were attacked as “squatters” and
their homes smashed and broken in an attempt to force them off land they have
lived on for some forty years . . . for providing to these families, for loving
OUR children here at Tumaini, for embracing us and bringing her (Tine’s)
grandparents to meet us, for outfitting our children with new school shoes and
finally, for establishing Tumaini Belgium, again in support of all the good
work we are trying to do here, how do we say thank you?
To Mama Pam who is spearheading our U.S. delegation . . .
for bringing us our second container (and most of its contents), for
introducing and talking up and out about Tumaini in her small, Ohio town, and
discovering many, MANY people interested and caring enough to support her in
what will be Tumaini USA . . . thank you so very, very much little sister.
To all of our volunteers, shared here or not, we thank
you. Each of you has brought an extraordinary
something to us at Tumaini and we thank God and we thank YOU for that . . . to
each of you from each of us (and to Katy our prayer is that you will rest and
not miss us too much for you will return shortly . . . very shortly) Ahsante
Sana kwa upendo wenu!! (Thank you very
much for your love!!)
Report cards for our Tumaini Classes I and II students
follow . . . be well!
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