Thursday, September 17, 2009

First CoKF Music and Drama Festival Ends with a Bang


The 2009 Children of Kibera Foundation Drama and Music Festival was held at Kibra Academy on Karanja Road from

September 17th to September 19th. More than 200 students from a dozen secondary schools in Kibera performed at the festival, a first of its kind organized to celebrate the talents of young people in Kibera's under-resourced secondary schools. The festival theme was "Positive Living in Kibera," a theme that the participants brought to life in different categories of solo and group poetry recitations, dramatized narrations, songs and dances. Visit our facebook fanpage for a full album of photos from the three days of competition. Winners at the festival in the different categories received certificates, textbook vouchers, and trophies as well as a laptop for the overall top school. Hundreds of spectators turned up Saturday to watch the finals concert performances, which had to be staged outside to accommodate the large crowd. The local radio station Pamoja FM carried live broadcasts of several performances over the three days of competition, spreading the messages and conveying the artistic talents of Kibera youth to the more than two million people in the listenership area.




Thursday, September 10, 2009

Two Months of Computer Lab at Kibra Academy

It is a chilly afternoon in Nairobi. Lunch has just ended and I am shivering at Kibra Academy, getting ready to find out from the students whether the 10 laptops and 20 desktops donated for their computer lab two months are a true asset or not.

I begin with Brian Muchiri and Ahmed Khadija, both form one students (9th grade). My first question to all of them was the exact date the computer lab was officially opened. Although they can not remember the date, Brian is very glad to know how to use the machines. He wants to run a catering business in the future and feels computer literacy will come handy in advertisement and other aspects of his business. Khadija had never operated a computer before, and thinks herself privileged now with the free lessons at school. She would like to become a medical practitioner and the computers will aid her research on medical matters.

“How would you integrate the knowledge you are gaining to improve your community?” I ask. Brian responds, "I would like to volunteer to teach more people in Kibera how to use computers."

Edward Mbuti, a four four student, also accepts my invite for an interview and admits learning lots of new things since the computer lab was opened at Kibra Academy. With only one month left before KCSE national exams that determine whether can get admission to university, Edward uses the machines as a ‘mind relaxer.’ He strolls to the lab every evening after a long day in class, uses the computers for a while to clear his head before going back for evening preps with a fresh mind. Edward explains that the knowledge gained shall make him cope successfully when employed. He hopes for the introduction of an internet connection to all the computers in the lab so he can ciommunicate with people from all over the world. “Any last word?” Edward: "Thanks a lot to the Children of Kibera Foundation for noticing some people needed to be introduced to the world."

The interviews with the first three students warm me already. It is now time for science classes, and more students are moving from one classroom to the next. I manage to catch a few moments with Ali Husan and Jamaldin Hussein. Ali is very grateful she says, "my future is getting shaped already with the computer knowledge at hand." Jamaldin's aspiration is to become a university lecturer of engineering and to give back to the community what he got free. Both students would like to see the school offer certification courses in computers that will add value to their resumes.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

PBS Wide Angle "Time for School 3" - Please Watch

PBS Wide Angle is showing a segment of its ongoing groundbreaking documentary series "Time For School" on September 9th, 10th, 11th and the week of September 21st on many PBS markets around the USA, please check your local PBS listings for a showtime. One of the seven children that the PBS Wide Angle production crew has followed is Joab, now an adolescent boy growing up in Kibera and the struggles he goes through to get an education before and after he loses his parents. These are the kind of amazing dedicated children for whom your support and our work at the Children of Kibera Foundation makes an immense difference. Joab's teacher and assistant principal at Ayany Primary School, Mrs. Leah Asego, was also my teacher in 5th and 6th grade, a real hero, still doing heroic work. Be sure to tune in to tonight's episode on PBS to see their stories of what it takes to give a child in Kibera a shot in life through education.

PBS and the Wide Angle team have selected Children of Kibera Foundation ( http://www.childrenofkibera.org ) as one of the recommended charities to which their viewers can go to make donations to support orphans and vulnerable children like Joab. If you can tune in to PBS tonight to watch the show, please do with as many of your friends and family as possible. The earlier episodes of this documentary series that began in 2003 have been powerful and very well done. I am sure you will be touched to see the story of Joab from Kibera tonight on the show along with other kids from six other countries around the world. If you can not tune in at the right time for the show on your local PBS station, you can catch the current season of "Time to School" on the PBS Wide Angle website at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/wideangle/episodes/time-for-school-series/how-you-can-help/5521/

Thank you so much for your support of our work and the difference you have made possible in the lives of all the children we serve in Kibera.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

CoKF In Action: Home Visits



CoKF students lead the way to their homes inside the Kibera slum.

CoKF In Action: Retreat Weekend

Above: Jeff leads the retreat participants in singing "Jambo," a song very popular with foreigners.

Life outside of school: Student interviews and home visits

On one weekday afternoon, Mr. Sabwa, the headmaster of Kibra Academy, spoke to us interns amidst a few high-school students who were making use of laptop battery power during one of Nairobi’s power rationing days. Mr. Sabwa, who usually espouses an impulsive and stern demeanor in front of the students, revealed his more compassionate side in this small, private environment.

“I always ask myself, if I had grown up in Kibera, would I have made it?” he asked rhetorically. “I learn to admire these kids. You wonder how a girl who continues to go to school in form 3 and form 4, how did she do it?”

Mr. Sabwa’s point is one that became increasingly clear to the interns as we spent more time in Kibera and learned about the more intimate details of the students’ lives. We grew to admire the students, realizing that somehow, in an environment where families have few economic opportunities and children are vulnerable to violence and sexual exploitation, the students that we taught and mentored every day somehow managed to get to school and earn decent grades.

During the last week of the internship, Sarah and I were charged with profiling the sixty CoKF-sponsored students, including 45 primary-school students and 15 high-school students. Later, fifteen of the sponsored students would show me their homes in the heart of Kibera, an experience that put faces to the names and places we’d heard about in the interviews.

Below are some quotes gathered during the interviews from students about their family lives, health, interests and obstacles.

Family life
“My father is a tailor. Sometimes we sleep hungry. Sometimes when there is no electricity, he can’t do his job. He just sits down.” –Class 5, Red Rose Primary School
“My father has two new wives. The first one is very harsh. You can’t even drop a spoon. When she beats me, I run to my auntie’s house or I scream so they can help me. One time she beat me so hard, I went to the hospital.” –Class, 5, primary-school student

Interests
“I like community work, like cleaning the environment. While I’m at home, I work with friends who want to help, so we use brooms and rakes to clean the outside.” –First year high-school student
“I have a deep interest in biology, for example, how things are born, grow and live.” –First year high-school student
“I like to help my mother fetch water, wash utensils and clean the house.” –Class 5, Red Rose Primary School
“I want to be a pilot. I would travel to the U.S.A., China and Pakistan.” Class 2, Red Rose Primary School
“I like sausage, chips and ugali.” –Kindergarten student, Red Rose Primary School.

Challenges
“Dealing with peer pressure is difficult. There are so many idlers that can persuade someone to do anti-social activities, for example drugs.” –First year high-school student
“I have a problem with my sight due to usage of lanterns for more than eight years.” –First year high-school student
“When I was little, my mother always went out and she used to leave me out the door and I would eat sand. She would come late and there would be no food. But now I live with my aunt and I don’t sleep hungry.” –Class 2, Red Rose Primary School
“I need to work extra-hard to achieve what I want and to retain back my grades that were better last year.” –Second year high-school student
“Sometimes, I feel like I want to die because at home the police fight at night. Because they shoot the gun up and it scares me.” –Class 1, Red Rose Primary School
“The home environment is noisy which is not good for personal studies.” –First year high-school student

The power of role models
Despite some of their obstacles, it is clear that role models can greatly alter the outlook of Kibera's children. I believe our time in Kibera did successfully introduce computers and make their relevance in our rapidly changing world understood. I believe that the students in Kibera learned valuable cultural information about life in the United States. But, I think the most important aspect of the internship was our job as mentors working with Jeff, Ken and the teachers at Red Rose and the Kibra Academy to encourage these students, to convey that they have a choice in their destiny. One Red Rose student at the end of her interview asked me if she could add something to her profile, a quote that demonstrates the power of role models in Kibera.
“Let me tell you my wish: to go to America. To have money so I can help street boys and girls. Like Ken. So I can help others like I was helped in primary school.”


On August 13, CoKF-sponsored students show me their homes in Kibera.


In the home of Laureen, a ten-year-old at Red Rose Primary School.


Red Rose students lead the way to their homes in Kibera.


Kibera residents grow vegetables in sacks such as these. The vegetables are then sold near the railroad or main street.

Red Rose student Mercy, age nine, and I pose in her home. Mercy lives with her aunt and nine other children in this small Kibera residence. "There is barely room for them," says her Red Rose teacher Sylvia.


CoKF-sponsored high-school students Kelvin, Kevin, Hassan and Joseph concoct a fictitious story about how they are all related. Teenage boys will be teenage boys.