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| My first visit to Emmanuel Project |
I’ve been involved, one way or another, with Emmanuel Project in Nairobi, Kenya for over five years now. Emmanuel Center provides education, shelter, health care, etc. to street children, and it has provided me with never ending learning, inspiration and joy.
However, the work has never been easy and journey has had bumps here and there. Sometimes it is hard to see that we are making a difference – when you consider there are 250,000 street kids in Kenya, for example, and we are only able to directly help about 40 a year. And sometimes the logistics, management and financials can distract from the true mission of the project – to give street kids a chance at a better life.
So when I become discouraged or frustrated I try and remember the individual stories: the first Emmanuel student to graduate from secondary school, who is now in university; the street boy who would barely speak, he was so traumatised by life on the streets, who learned carpentry in a vocational training institute and is now an apprentice in a workshop; the AIDS orphan who completed secondary school and catering training at a small college and is now working in a hotel. The list could go on. It is these faces, these stories that keep me motivated and keep Emmanuel Project doing what it does best – giving street kids a chance.
We’ve recently made some changes to how we go about this. We’ve never liked the idea of institutionalizing children. In Africa in particular, it is a foreign practice to put children into special homes; it is better for them to be integrated into the community. So Emmanuel Project has been working hard to get as many street children as possible placed with relatives – Emmanuel Project still provides for all education and health needs but the children live with families. Those children who have no relatives we are placing in boarding schools. This way we are able to close the center facility and can use all the money we were spending on rent, bills and staff to directly fund what children need most.
The truth is that this change in programming hasn’t been easy for any of us. In many cases both the children and the families need a lot of support and counselling in order to live together. For the leadership of Emmanuel Project, it has required some soul searching and remembering that our goal is to help children, not have own fancy building.
However, now the process is almost complete, I believe we are all very excited about it. The children are starting a new school year with their usual eagerness and excitement, and the leadership of Emmanuel Project is enjoying being able to focus on the kids.
If you would like to join us on this next leg of the Emmanuel journey I ask that you please consider donating to Emmanuel Project. Donations can be made online via the Squamish Rotary Foundation, are tax deductible for Canadians, and there are no administration fees. If you are wondering how much to donate these figures might help you:
- $550 or $46 a month = one year in primary school for a former street kid
- $750 or $63 a month = one year in secondary school for a former street kid
- $600 or $50 a month = one year in vocational training for a former street kid
P.S These number include the cost of school fees, school supplies, nutritious food, and health care!
