Monday, July 1, 2013

And so it begins....

The past two weeks have been full in the village of Kapelebyong. Laughter, loss of patience, hugging, sweating, babies born, grandmothers passing away,
sunburns, misquote bites, some other bug bites, curriculum planning, walking, walking, walking, talking, talking, praying, planning, agreeing, changing of contracts and planning again. Drum roll please……we are building an Administrative Building Block for John Eluru Memorial Secondary School. The school, built by Hands in Service in 2005 and the school were I’ve continued to volunteer my time with over the past 6 years, is growing in numbers of students and teachers (this is a good thing for the school). This means, the campus needs to expand. Uganda has interesting laws. One of them is: Unless a school has a “center number”, students cannot take their end of term exams on the school premises. They must pay a neighboring school (the closest being 20 miles away) over one million shillings (about $500) so that their students may sit for exams there and be recognized as students by the Ugandan government. A school does not receive a “center number” unless they have an Administrative Building. Therefore, after many long meetings, it was decided upon that the most needed items at the school were an Administrative Building, a scanner copier, and chalkboard erasers. (Being that the school is 2 hours from a somewhat sizable town, chalkboard erasers are hard to come by and making copies is a weekend event.) The school has come a long way since 2005 and it’s amazing to witness the locals taking responsibility and pouring their lives into it. Still, there are families that do not care about Education (especially educating their daughters) and the poverty cycle continues. A fence was placed around the school property by Hands in Service and corn is growing everywhere within the compound which will help the school and community. World Bank is donating a chemistry lab and the building process for that started in December and has come to a halt. The teachers and locals are saying that the contractor hired for the job is corrupt and has used all the money to build the lab on things other than the lab. The contractor extended his contract until September. Locals say it’s so he can find money for his debt. The contractor is not from the area and of course, is not trusted. As far as the Admin Building goes, we a using a local, well known, well educated contractor that we’ve used in the past. Money is handled by me and contracts are being signed Monday. Here’s hoping!

5 comments:

  1. Amazing Amelia! Much love and many blessings!

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  2. Loving that you can blog from there! Thanks for giving us a glimpse of your work. What a different world that it is. Praying for your strength and safety!

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  3. Wish I was with you, but so glad to share in the adventure through your blog. Keep the updates and photos coming! I'm so proud of all your hard work and strong spirit out there. You and the people of Kapelebyong do amazing work together! GOD BLESS sweet friend!

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