Our Futures project has a mission of assisting communities to be able to offer opportunities for bright futures, which may not otherwise be possible, to children and adults alike. Vocational training for adults is the focus, to enable them to then be able to afford school fees for their own children or children in their care.
Our secondary focus or project is about supporting and sponsoring the education of children or young adults who don’t have a guardian that can provide school fees for them. This helps these young people to avoid having to go into work at this young age and missing out on school, or even living on the streets. We partner with the schools on these initiatives and just work as a link between those who would like to assist a child, and those children who are most vulnerable. The schools also work to ensure that the children are in the best possible environment and if there is a way that they can be put into school through their community, then this is the best scenario and will always be worked towards.
We were volunteering alongside Rugarama Primary School in Uganda and attended meetings that the school Headmaster Johnson facilitated, which were creating a community of support and ensuring that any vulnerable children were highlighted, and any new or ongoing issues for parents and pupils. We were invited to attend and engaged in the discussions as to what was needed to allow them to solve some of the issues that kept repeating and were there for so many of them. The resounding answer was that they couldn’t find jobs or fund their personal training for a new livelihood and thus couldn’t pay school fees. The other issue was that mortality is relatively high and there were a great deal of children with no parents or only one parent, which made the situation even harder. Other families had taken these vulnerable children in, but then struggled to provide for them on top of their own family. This means that the majority of these children stay at home and act as babysitters to younger children, or go out to work.
From this we decided to pilot a programme where we organised workshops from skilled persons in the local community to come and train 25 of the care-givers (widows, aunties, grandparents, friends.) They learnt how to weave and also jewellery making; 2 popular forms of crafts here and a way to also reach out through fundraising by making traditional wears that can be sold as gifts.
The trainings means that the care-givers or guardians of the children are able to support the children themselves, but what happens when a single-mum is trying to provide for many children, or an elderly relative has taken on their guardian role, but can’t work? Well this is where sponsorship comes in. The school has identified those children who are vulnerable and will not be able to benefit from the training programme, and who urgently need to be back in school. Although sponsorship is both unsustainable and a last resort due to the best scenario being support for the child from their own community, it can also be essential sometimes, and we endeavour to only be linking children with sponsors, for whom there is no other option to attend school. In this light we also ask that it isn’t taken lightly and the intention will be to support the child you sponsor throughout their remaining school years, or until their situation improves and a local avenue for them to attend school is created or identified; both of which we continue to also encourage and work on. We understand that circumstances change and each sponsorship is yearly, with an option to cancel at any time, but by paying upfront or commiting for at least that school year, you help with consistency and routine and also for a child to benefit from the feeling of being supported and secure, which may not be a feeling that a lot of vulnerable children or orphans are familiar with.
The sponsorship programme is currently running in three schools, one primary school in the west of Uganda that has a high number of vulnerable children and orphans. The other two schools are a primary and secondary school in the north of Uganda, which has a high proportion of former child-soldiers or children that were born in the bush.
Please see our sponsorship page for more details.
In the North of Uganda, war raged for 3 decades and over 25,000 children were kidnapped and forced to be child-soldiers, so many adults who were children then, have missed out on their education. This has resulted in a high number of unemployed and untrained people. In the West of Uganda, there is a high number of orphans, mainly caused by HIV and other illness related deaths, again resulting a high unemployment rate.
If you would like to hear more about the hstory of Northern Uganda, check out Blondesuzie’s blog post here.
We offering trainings that may otherwise be unaffordable, and equipment or materials, it gives a start and opportunity to an individual, and also opens up the whole community to be able to better support each other.
We have put on craft-making workshops, where women and men learn how to make African traditional crafts, such as table mats, baskets, paper-bead necklaces and cushion covers. We provide the materials such as rafia, varnish for the beads, dye for the reeds/rafia, kitenge material, paper, and also the trainer and assistants for the workshops. We continue to provide materials for their work going forward, until they have sold some and can then begin to support themselves. We also provide training support for one teacher at each school to access counselling training.
Going forward, we plan to open a vocational training centre in Gulu
Our goals are to be able to offer training to everyone who could benefit and ensure all children are able to attend school, whether that be through the training of their parent or guardian, which provides fees, or through our sponsorship programme.
We would love to be able to offer scholarships to some of the adults in the communities we support to be able to attend other workshops or training courses, that currently we can’t offer such as bricklaying and motor mechanics. We also have a more long term goal to partner with the school in northern Uganda, and another NGO, to use some existing buildings that are out of use at the school, to create a vocational centre. This would enable us to be able to offer the workshops out to the general community also, as well as provide permanent employment to the trainers, and to generally have a more sustainable long-term approach. It would provide a space for people to train and be trained in various skills such as bricklaying, plastering, car and bike mechanics, tailoring and IT.
We are currently crowd-funding for this, so if you would like to help us fundraise, or can donate, or even have some ideas and expertise to lend - please get in touch.
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