Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Shangalia... celebrating the performing arts in a Nairobi slum






On Saturday, May 21st, Brian and I (along with a teaching friend and colleague, Misha) visited Shangalia, a children's centre in one of Nairobi's slums. This is a very special place that, for 16 years, has been using the performing arts to help street kids deal with their experiences. Next year Misha and I are planning to have our Global Issues Network students visit Shangalia on Wednesday afternoons to help with the school program at Shangalia and to partner in many other ways; while we were visiting to chat further about what the partnership could look like, we were treated to some performances by the children. Acrobatics, brass band, dance... many performing arts are celebrated at the centre which, in English, is called Rejoice.

Shakespeare on the outdoor stage...





At ISK we have a beautiful arts centre that includes a circular outdoor ampitheatre, the perfect place for our grade 9 students to perform Romeo and Juliet last week. Cora played the nurse at the Capulet ball, and the entire grade 9 class presented key scenes from the play with a great sense of dramatic flair.

Sunday, May 08, 2011

Starehe Girls' School... a new partner






On Saturday, May 7th, Brian and I spent the morning at the Starehe Girls' School on the outskirts of Nairobi. Surrounded by coffee fields and forest, the school sits on 55 acres of donated land and, since 2005, has been educating high school girls. All of the girls (almost 400 are enrolled at the school this year) are on scholarships and come from poor families. The girls' school was started as a partner school to the Starehe Boys' School (which we've also partnered with), which, for 50 years, has been offering excellent education to underprivileged boys. There were so many impressive things we saw at the Starehe Girls' School: polite, hard-working students; immaculate classrooms and dorms; beautiful grounds; innovative and hands-on learning projects such as a small farm with gardens and cows (the manure produced by the 14 cows at the farm is mixed with water and fermented to produce biogas that fuels one of the stoves in the school's kitchen and the cows are milked every day to provide fresh milk for meals). What a beautiful school and a beautiful vision for education. I can't wait to get some of my Global Issues Network students out to see this school, particularly because some of them ran a workshop about the value of educating girls in developing nations at the recent GISS conference. (See www.girleffect.org for more information about this, and about how the Starehe Girls' School is such an important investment in Kenya's future.)

Monday, May 02, 2011

New Maasai Partners & a Visit to Amboseli...












On Monday, May 2nd, we traveled down to Amboseli National Park to meet with Daniel, the schoolmaster at the Ilkengaare Community School we've been working with all year. After catching up with him, we drove to a nearby Maasai community where Daniel introduced us to friends and family living there. The school in this village (called Inchurra Maasai Community School) has some needs that we may be able to help meet through Freedom Through Learning. We were treated to a welcome dance and a visit with village leaders, as well as a visit to the school before we went back to Daniel's traditional home for tea and chapatis. It was a fabulous day, topped off with some close-up encounters with beautiful elephants on the way out of the park.

Sunday, May 01, 2011

Books on the shelves...






On Saturday, April 30th, Brian and I traveled back to the Vumilia IDP camp in the Rift Valley with a team of 20 ISK students to engage in a Habitat for Humanity build. Since our last visit about 10 houses had been completed, with just over 120 left to go until everyone is housed. In one of these photos you can see a makeshift tent (from UNHCR tarps) that a family has been living in for three years. During the build, we took students over to our Freedom Through Learning library that will officially open on Tuesday, May 2nd! Books are now on the shelves, posters are on the walls and community members will soon be reading the many donated books we have collected. It is so exciting. I took time to read with the kids while I was there, and I also met with two enterprising women, Monica and Rosemary, about the possibility of getting a women's cooperative started to make and sell purses made from recycled plastic bags. There are so many wonderful things happening here, and we are building some beautiful friendships with this community. In fact, we went home with some eggs from Rosemary and Monica's chickens and some hot peppers from Monica's gardens - people can be so generous when they have so little.