Saturday, February 16, 2013

ITS NOT TOO LATE TO LEARN

Mother and son sat PLE together, and passed

 

Mother and son sat PLE together, and passed 

 

Ruth Namale is a woman with ambition. She is a single mother of three children, a cook at St. Kaloli Lwanga Catholic Church, Mbikko and a Primary Seven ‘vacist’. Her story tells a woman determined to achieve certain goals. Namale is among the pupils who passed the recently released 2012 Primary Leaving Exams. She got aggregate 16.

At 41 years, she beat the odds and joined school with Julius Mweruka, her 17-year-old last born son proving to the world that it is still possible for one to go back to school, even after a long break, and pass. After 27 years out of school, few would easily take the path Namale did.

She first joined Nakulamude Primary School in Gomba where she studied up to Primary Four before dropping out of school. She was married off. However she parted ways with her husband with whom she has three children. In 1990, she moved to Mbikko where she has been to date.

Namale says, her inspiration to go back to school was sparked by her colleague’s boss and her children.
“At first, I thought it wasn’t possible to go back to school after a long break, and much as I wanted to speak English like any other person at the office, it was not going to be easy for an illiterate person like me. I asked myself, “How can I study while working? Where will I get the money to pay my fees and that of my children? And, will I succeed in my attempt?” Those questions did not have answers.
“However, after thinking over it, I approached my boss, and he advised me to join Twezimbe Integrated Development Programme limited. I was told, it offers lessons for adults. I knew this was the only opportunity I had to get hands on books again,” she recalls.

Like other adults doing primary education, Namale was also the centre of attention. At first her family laughed at her, thinking she would never be able to make it. But she proved them wrong and did what they thought was impossible.

“When I returned to school, people thought it was ridiculous. Most people think that education is merely about jobs and money. Now they were asking what an old woman like me was doing in a classroom. However, for me it wasn’t all about money or the job, for me it was all about learning English so I can be at par with my bosses.”

Mweruka, Namale’s son happened to be in the same class as his mum. He was surprised that she was smarter than he thought.

“When mummy told us the she was going back to school, I knew she was joking. Seriously, after such a long break, what was she going to do in school, I asked myself. She didn’t even have an idea of reading any English statement but as time went by, I realised mummy wasn’t coming home early as she usually did. That’s when I realised she might have started school. She confirmed it to me and we started exchanging notes. In the last days before exams, we studied in the same class at St Benedict Primary School in Nakiibizi.
“Mummy showed me that she is brighter than I thought and as time went by, she proved us wrong and persisted with her education.”

Blessing in disguise
She says, with the help of her children and especially Mweruka, she was able to make it in exams.
“Much as Julius is my youngest son, I had great respect for him in addition to sharing the same class. We were at different schools but whenever Julius came back home, I would ask for his books so I could crosscheck if what they are studying is the same as what we were learning. Most of this time, we did revision together and this helped me so much.
“Having Julius studying with me more or less contributed to my success. Although I knew that my son would beat me in exams, I was always optimistic that it would not be by a big margin.” Indeed, Mweruka scored aggregate seven in his PLE.
Many would doubt that in a span of two years which Namale has spent in school, she would be able to speak fluent English. But Namale is now able to make some English statements. Currently, Namale hopes to further her education at Nakivubo Adult Education centre in Jinja while her son, will join St. Noah Mawagali in Mbikko.


“Right now, I am working hard and saving a lot of money for me and my children. Last year, I had a challenge of working while studying but I will still maintain my routine. I also have another challenge of fees for my three children but as time goes, with the help of my boss, Sister Maureen Carroll, I know all will be well,” she says with optimism.

Its a blessing for mums who would prefer to be housewives and learn something of numeracy or literacy is for all the ages. Thumbs up for our women.

Tuesday, August 09, 2011

THUMBS UP FOR A START

At last the Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution is considering making it a fundamental right for girls to get sanitary towels and books. This would enable them to pursue their education uninterrupted, chairman Charles Nyachae said recently. He said the new laws sought to help women excel in society and addresses the issues that may make them lose self-esteem.

Schoolgirls will begin receiving free sanitary pads next term.

The question is will all the girl child in the entire country within secondary schools receive these towels or just within the urban schools and leaving the unrecognized rural folks. Lets wait and here from the chairman if he is able to solve the rural problems too.

Though this is a good initiative as a country we have been lacking behind in some issues as this and things have been taken for granted.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

FOOD SECURITY

Food security has been an issue in our country Kenya for a long time. Instead of teaching our Kenyans how to fish we have been giving them fish all the time, what measures can we learn from other countries where there are no rain for all round seasons. Examples of Israel who have great irrigation systems from their small rivers and lakes.

President Kibaki pointed out that the Government has taken steps to implement both short and long term measures that will ensure the country does not continue experiencing maize shortage.

"We are importing more maize so as to ensure Kenyans can easily access the commodity. We are committed to ensuring that wananchi have enough food," President Kibaki said.

The President was addressing wananchi when he distributed relief maize at Kithimani Market in Yatta District, Ngoliba Market, Kilimambogo Market and Gatuanyaga Primary School in Thika East District and at Kiandutu in Thika West District. This was in February 2009 to date these areas have experienced enough shortage of food commodities.

The President said the Government is focusing on implementing water projects in the arid parts of the country including Yatta, Thika East and Thika West districts so as to provide sufficient water for domestic use and for irrigation. Though the projects are well intended to improve the areas it always takes much time for implementation to take place in such areas or even forgotten.

"The provision of water for irrigation is a long term measure geared towards addressing food shortage," the Head of State said.

President Kibaki said the Government is also working towards providing fertilizer and other farm inputs to farmers as a way of boosting food production in the country.

On youth empowerment, the President said his Government is implementing policies to create employment for the country's youth.

Emphasizing the importance of education in empowering the youth, President Kibaki once again urged parents to ensure their children acquire adequate education.

The Head of State said plans are also underway to rehabilitated roads in Yatta, Thika East and Thika West district as it is doing in other parts of the country so as to reduce the burden of transport costs on wananchi.

He commended residents of the three districts for living together peacefully and urged them to continue in the same spirit.

Speaking during the occasion, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance Uhuru Kenyatta assured Kenyans that as leaders they will rally behind the President in ensuring that Kenyans have enough food.

The Deputy Prime Minister called on leaders in the country to shelf personal interests and work together for the common good of the country. But still there is little done on these matters.

Since then the people have never seen again the rationing of food the chilling question is how can we teach our kenyans on food security issues instead of asking for assistance from our donor brothers.

Kenya should be challenged to seek help from God to show us the way forward for anything instead of all the time relying on our government for food rationing which will never be enough though we should be mind concious on what we have as a community and come up with ways on which we can sustain our communities come rain or sunshine.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

SCHOLARSHIP

EDUCATION TO ALL

With the hardship among the society in Kenya and other parts of East African countries as a whole, MCMCK have put in place a scholarship fund with the partnership of Facefund organization. Funding African Children's Education, Inc. (FACE) is a nonprofit organization with a mission to award secondary school scholarships to orphaned and needy African students so that they will have the opportunity to become self-sufficient adults and contributing members of their community and country.Face fund has been assistance to Mother and Child Mission Centre (K) in this field and we have been ascertaining that all children who have passed well be it girl child or boy child they receive their higher education needed and IT studies which are conducted within the centre। Face fund has been inspirational in assisting MCMCK in paying the school fees for these students in conjunction with MCMCK and currently we are having four students for this years scholarship beneficiaries.


Students who received scholarship from FACE FUND

above on the Left - Annie the President of Face fund hands scholarship to astudent

MCMCK don't discriminate their race, colour or ethnicity since all children are equal in the programmed areas of scholarship and other educational management and assistance MCMCK offers.

We have currently given our IT services to more than 20 students on scholarship basis freely in our centre and have three who are currently learning and have completed their courses in August 2008. We are currently having five students this month and more are to be enrolled next Month May 2009.

The centre director has been the pillar to this IT sector scholarship as he receives many applications though the centre has just few computers cannot accommodate each and every student the centre is trying to expand its IT classes so as to accommodate more scholarship for the needy boys and girls who have completed their secondary education.

स्चोलार्शिप्स

EDUCATION TO ALL

With the hardship among the society in Kenya and other parts of East African countries as a whole, MCMCK have put in place a scholarship fund with the partnership of Facefund organization. Funding African Children's Education, Inc. (FACE) is a nonprofit organization with a mission to award secondary school scholarships to orphaned and needy African students so that they will have the opportunity to become self-sufficient adults and contributing members of their community and country.Face fund has been assistance to Mother and Child Mission Centre (K) in this field and we have been ascertaining that all children who have passed well be it girl child or boy child they receive their higher education needed and IT studies which are conducted within the centre। Face fund has been inspirational in assisting MCMCK in paying the school fees for these students in conjunction with MCMCK and currently we are having four students for this years scholarship beneficiaries.


Students who received scholarship from FACE FUND

above on the Left - Annie the President of Face fund hands scholarship to astudent

MCMCK don't discriminate their race, colour or ethnicity since all children are equal in the programmed areas of scholarship and other educational management and assistance MCMCK offers.

We have currently given our IT services to more than 20 students on scholarship basis freely in our centre and have three who are currently learning and have completed their courses in August 2008. We are currently having five students this month and more are to be enrolled next Month May 2009.

The centre director has been the pillar to this IT sector scholarship as he receives many applications though the centre has just few computers cannot accommodate each and every student the centre is trying to expand its IT classes so as to accommodate more scholarship for the needy boys and girls who have completed their secondary education.

VACANCIES

FUND RAISER/RESOURCE MOBILIZERS

The ideal candidate shall be mandated to look for donors who can fund the organization in the program areas of:

  1. Peace Building and Reconcilliation (IDPs) in Kenya
  2. Reproductive/Sexual rights
  3. Sexual abuse/Child abuse
  4. Scholarship to less fortunate children (Secondary & College education)
  5. Community IT Education
  6. Food security and Medication

The candidate shall liaise with the Donor on the above programmed areas and with vision and mission of the organization Mother and Child Mission Centre (Kenya) has if is affiliated with the Donor organization.

The work shall be on part time basis.

Terms and conditions shall be:

  • PART TIME
  • ON CONTRACT BASIS
  • HAVE WORKED WITH A NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATION
  • HAVE ATLEAST 6 Months EXPERIENCE WITH AN NGO/CBO
  • WILLING TO WORK IN HARDSHIP AREAS (RELIEF AREAS)

APPLICATION DEADLINE - OPEN


Wednesday, May 14, 2008

विल इद्प्स रेसिवे थे कैश DONATED

President Kibaki and his Cabinet ministers on Monday appeared to set aside the law banning public officers from conducting harambees and gathered to raise Sh457 million for internal refugees.

In a manner reminiscent of former President Daniel arap Moi’s time, Cabinet ministers lined up to hand the President donations from their ministries.

And in less than three hours, the President announced the final figure of Sh457,271,129 raised to help families affected by the post-election violence to resettle. The violence which followed the disputed presidential election, left more than 1,000 people dead and 350,000 displaced.

But the figure was still far short of the Sh30 billion budgeted to help displaced people rebuild their lives.

When he came to power in 2002, President Kibaki and the then Minister for Justice and Constitutional Affairs, Mr Kiraitu Murungi, went to great lengths to distance the new administration from harambees.

Mr Murungi successfully lobbied for enactment of the Public Officer Ethics Act which, among other things, banned civil servants from presiding over harambees as a way of fighting corruption and looting of State resources.

True to form, President Kibaki even stayed away from a harambee in his Othaya constituency to drive home the point.

The President was at Kenyatta International Conference Centre to launch the funds drive at a function attended by Cabinet ministers, permanent secretaries, members of the diplomatic corps and chief executive officers of various parastatals.

The function brought to mind similar drives conducted by then President Daniel arap Moi in aid of schools, churches or water projects.

President Kibaki pledged a donation of Sh5 million towards the resettlement kitty, insisting that it will be his personal contribution.

The ceremony differed from others as ministers both from ODM and PNU led their assistants and PSs in presenting cheques to the President.

The president then presented the cheques to the chairman of the fund, retired Archbishop Ndingi mwana a’Nzeki. Donors were warned that it was now a criminal offence to issue bouncing cheques.

Public Service

The Ministry of Agriculture led by William Ruto topped the list of donors with Sh298 million, money contributed by members of staff and parastatals under it.

The newly created office of the Prime Minister donated Sh500,000 with a pledge to give more. The cheque was presented to the President by Public Service minister Dalmas Otieno as the PM, Mr Raila Odinga, was in Western Province. The Office of the Vice President donated Sh512,700. The cheque was presented by Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka.

The Ministry of Energy led by Mr Kiraitu Murungi donated Sh14.8 million.

Other contributors were Ministry of Medical Services( Sh6.6 million), Office of the President (Sh6.3 million) and Ministry of Foreign Affairs Sh4.6 million.

Ministry of Trade headed by Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta and the Ministry of Local Government led by Deputy PM Musalia Mudavadi donated Sh1.3 million each.

The government of Algeria donated Sh30 million while China gave Sh1.38 million.

Speaking during the launch, President Kibaki urged Kenyans and the international community to help the government bridge the Sh29 billion deficit needed for the resettlement.

It requires Sh30 billion. The money will be used for construction of new houses, replacement of household effects as well as rehabilitation of community utilities and institutions destroyed in the violence.

Already, the Government has donated Sh1 billion to the fund also known as the Humanitarian Fund for Mitigation of Effects and Resettlement of Victims of Post-2007 Election Violence.

He said the resettlement programme must succeed adding that those displaced were mainly smallholder farmers who played a major role in food production.

Food production

There is fear that famine might hit the country as food production is expected to decline in the face of spiralling global prices.

Seated with President Kibaki at the dais was Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka, Speaker of the National Assembly Kenneth Marende, Internal Security minister George Saitoti and his Special Programmes counterpart, Dr Naomi Shaaban.

President Kibaki said the resettlement which started with those who were in the camps, will now move to the next phase; address the plight of those who took shelter in homes of friends and relatives after their property were destroyed.

Last week alone, he said 85,000 displaced persons returned to their farms under the Operation Rudi Nyumbani programme. Prof Saitoti said 70,000 people were still in the camps, adding that the task of maintaining them was a major challenge to the Government.

He said the Government will soon convene a meeting with donors and NGOs to seek support for the resettlement.

Prof Saitoti said the provincial administration is compiling a list of all property destroyed during the violence.

He said 32 new police stations and 40 administration police posts had been built in the affected areas to restore security.

Mr Musyoka said though construction of police stations was critical, there was need of encouraging reconciliation among the different communities.

“It is time for proper national healing and reconciliation and we will need more than construction of police stations,” said the VP.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

ELECTION GIMIC FOR WOMEN

What the government is trying to do is buy votes from women too just it has done to the youth fraternity. Most of our challenges which our communities are encoutering is to see food on the table and these culmunates the 50% poor communities within urban and semi urban areas. With the hardship encoutered in our society the government is dangling with the kity while the common mwananchi doesnt know that the same cash being dangled to them is their own revenue being collected annually.

The Government is reaching out to the country’s crucial voting bloc by giving out Sh500 million under the Women Enterprise Fund, with a pledge to triple the kitty to Sh3 billion next year.

Gender and Sports minister Maina Kamanda was quick to distance the release of the first tranche of the Sh1 billion kitty from the electioneering goodies, stating that the fund was a commitment President Kibaki made to the women last year.

“This fund was set up last year by the President to empower women and today, we are giving out the first allocation of the fund to facilitate enterprise development among women. We are not doing this for political reasons,” he said.

But the leaders of women financial institutions who were present at the official launch of the fund at the ministry’s offices at NSSF Building declared at a victory for their gender.

The release of the Sh500 million, which would be disbursed through selected 12 micro-financial institutions and the fund’s committees in each constituency, comes only 13 days to the General Election in which President Kibaki will be seeking to defend his seat on the Party of National Unity (PNU) ticket.

His challengers, who have dismissed the women fund and the youth fund as ploys to attract votes, are Mr Raila Odinga of ODM and Mr Kalonzo Musyoka of ODM Kenya.

Mr Musyoka and ODM Pentagon member William Ruto declared that the emancipation of the women and youth needs a comprehensive program of timed targets and not short term measures.

“How can they claim to be empowering women by releasing cheques when we know very well that the Sh1 billion youth fund is still shrouded in clouds? The Government has been unfair to the women of this country and ODM Kenya will change that when we take over power,” said Mr Musyoka.

On his part, Mr Ruto said the Kibaki administration was engaging in meaningless short-term interventions that could not last long and stated that ODM has a clear program on how to uplift the welfare of women and the youth.

“Both the women and youth funds are gestures of tokenism which will not have any meaningful impact to the plight of women and youth in this country. To be able to create opportunities for women and the youth, you need a complete shift to a comprehensive program. Short term myopic gestures targeting patronage will not succeed,” he said.

The Youth Enterprise Fund was also conceived in June 2006 and President Kibaki launched it in February this year where a total of Sh1 billion was given out. It is meant to draw the country’s youth who are most hit by unemployment to engage in income generating activities.

As the two leaders dismissed the launch of the fund in separate phone interviews, Mr Kamanda submitted that the Government has, in addition to the Sh1 billion kitty, put in place measures to give women a prominent role in the development of the country. He cited the review of laws that criminalise discrimination against women, enactment of the Sexual Offences Act, ratification of a convention to eliminate gender violence and the setting aside of one-third of public service jobs for women.

“The President has shown his determination to empower women to take their rightful place in socio-economic development. What we are doing today bears the testimony to the Government’s commitment to integrate women in the process of national development,” he said of the women who form majority of the country’s 14.3 million registered voters.

Most of our women lagislators should encourage this or ignore it. Remembering that our current situation is to get something for our families on the table we should think before we vote we should not vote with our stomaches neither our voes be bought but we should vote wisely .

Zachariah Ochieng
Mother and Child Mission Centre (Kenya)
Centre Director

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

ELECTION

GENERAL ELECTION - 2007

With the elections of December 2007 in Kenya women have been the worst hit in this general elections be it parliamentary or civic elections. Most women have been battered by the male counterparts as if the world belongs to men dominance only.

Mother and Child Mission Centre Kenya has foreseen this as the worst Gender based violence against women as a whole leave alone the family squamishes which occurs on daily basis. With just some few weeks to come to the general elections women have gone further in this election to elect their own and to foresee that gender based issues in the parliamentary assemblies are passed.

Most of the women who have the empowerment have gone ahead to assist other weak candidates who are viewing for the same positions as men to see them through young women and youth have to forge ahead and say even women can be leaders of this country and especially the most dominated areas by men since the independence of this country Kenya.

What can the communities do right now is to elect leaders not gender, be it women or men Mother and Child Mission Centre Kenya is looking on issues where by women have been critisized that they cannot be leaders while a leader cannot be just a man in this world.

We should focus our minds to our women candidates for the first time and overlook our men if they can be trusted really for the last years since independence other communities have never seen nor had a female candidate. The worst lesson should be let men vote for women and be counted as real men and let women vote for their fellow women and be counted as courageous women not to vote for men due to their masculinity but for their empathy and virtures of good leadership not through tribal lines nor through their background, but through self aspiration and determination that they too can lead this nation to the extreme of good governance and more so through better future for all women and the children of this country.

Let their be fair election for all women -

MOTHER AND CHILD MISSION CENTRE KENYA
CENTRE DIRECTOR
ZACHARIAH OCHIENG
TEL: 254720 935561