Saturday, September 7, 2013

The Trinity School - our sister school in Menlo Park

Last Thursday we presented to the student body at The Trinity School, a private preschool and primary in Menlo Park.  They have been a sort of sister school to Achungo since early 2011 when 5th grader and friend, Karen Rader, brought Achungo to her class as a 5th grade service project.

Here Karen is presenting to Monte a gift from Trinity including the school medallion and a letter signed by all the 5th graders. 

To the left is the letter and the medallion from Trinity and to the right is the letter from Achungo and the Achungo children in response
On our June 2011 trip to Achungo, we presented the medallion and letter to the children of Achungo and they provided a letter from Achungo back to Trinity, signed by Achungo's 5th graders.


 Since then, the students of Trinity have collected used clothing and shoes and such that supplied many wonderful things to the children of Achungo in addition to writing letters that our children have enjoyed and they have responded with letters and cards to the children of Trinity.

 This year Trinity donated 30 used Mac laptops to Achungo.  We've taken 20 out already and they are in excellent condition.  We set them up during our June 2013 trip and the Achungo students immediately began learning on them.  These are children who live in mud huts in one of the most economically depressed areas of the world.  The computer skills they learn will set them apart from all other primary school students and prepare them to be outstanding candidates for potential employment.

Monte has presented several times to Trinity's 5th grade class, sharing pictures and interactive discussion of life in rural Kenya while they took notes on their laptops and asked insightful questions.  He has presented a few times to the 2nd grade and other classes, and it is always a delightful experience.  When Michael Nyangi visited last December, he was able to share with a number of Trinity classes also.

This visit last Thursday Monte shared pictures like those here, including some of the laptops in use, of their past gifts and of the progress at Achungo since they first engaged with us (our classes were in tin sheds at that time and are now in our new campus!).  We also had letters from Achungo's 5th, 6th and 7th graders and cards from the younger classes that we distributed to the Trinity classes.

This is a very special relationship for us all!!




Saturday, August 3, 2013

News from Hamburg, Germany

News from Hamburg, Germany
I would like to introduce a new thread in this blog about activities in Hamburg leaded by Armin Opitz concerning support to the Achungo Children Centre.
My real name is Stefan Menck and I am, like Armin, teacher at a school in the Eastern Part of Hamburg, Germany.
With much work Armin was able to install an annual sponsored walk.
So I would like to announce the Achungo Sponsored Walk 2013 which will be held on the 12th of September.
Like last year two schools will participate: Our school, which is a secondary school and the school Oejendorfer Damm which is an elementary school. This means that about 800 pupils will start running on this coming september morning.

I will add news (and some photos of the last years walk) as soon as possible.

In future we will write this thread in German and English so that some of our younger pupils (who aren't capable of reading English) may follow this thread too.

Stefan Menck

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Our Founder Visits California: Michael's December Tour

Michael Nyangi, Founder and Kenyan Director of Achungo Children's Center, made his first trip to California this year.  This was a long awaited, long-planned visit to connect with his many supporters and for many more to hear his incredible story (see the prior post for his story).  He arrived on Wednesday, November 28 and stayed over 2 weeks, departing December 13.

Most of his flight costs were covered by a very generous supporter, using frequent flyer miles and paying the added fees.  Most of his trip he stayed with the Fishers and became part of our family and a very evident inspirational influence on our children.  And during his stay he visited 3 church sites, spoke at an informal dinner (potluck) and a formal tea, shared with many school children at 3 different schools, and told his story at 3 evening events and 2 luncheons as well as the MPPC Men's Bible Study and a private prayer group who had been praying for him for the past year.   I accompanied him at these events and each time I heard his story I was more inspired by it!


He enjoyed a trip to the beach and to SF, including the Golden Gate Bridge, and visited with the Sisters of Mercy and with Kiva in SF
as well as with the Stanford Institute for Innovation in Developing Countries (SEED).  And he toured Stanford and Silicon Valley, with a special tour of Google.  He thoroughly enjoyed his visit and reached many people in many ways and it was hard to see him go!

Michael joined a panel with Mark Swarner, Mission Pastor, and Zenebe, Director for an NGO in Ethiopia (Hope Enterprises) on Sunday, December 2nd at Menlo Park Presbyterian Church (MPPC) in Menlo Park in front of about 60 people and that evening again at MPPC's Mountain View campus with about 35 attending.   Michael told his story of realizing how little it took financially to change lives and founding first a micro-finance organization and then Achungo.  And he shared his forward-looking vision for Achungo.

The following Sunday, Michael shared his story with the youth group at Saratoga Federated Church and after services, spoke to a large gathering of those interested in missions in Africa and supporters of Achungo.  Here he is part of a presentation to the original U.S. Executive Director, Barbara Jeanrenaud and her husband, Henri, who are retiring from the Achungo Board.



During the week, Michael spoke to the 6th, 7th and 8th graders at Eastside College Preparatory School in East Palo Alto, hosted by Suney Park, a longtime Achungo supporter and teacher at Eastside.




Trinity School, a private primary in Menlo Park, has been something of a sister school to Achungo for almost 2 years.  Michael shared with the entire study body on Friday morning and then was invited into the 5th grade class (top picture on the right) and 2nd grade class (lower picture on right) where we handed out letters from the 5th and 2nd graders of Achungo.  Trinity students have been writing letters to Achungo students for over a year now and it has been an enriching experience for both sets of students.

We also shared with the Trinity preschool class and showed them pictures of the animals and of the school and students in Kenya.


 That afternoon Michael shared his story with 200 7th graders of Hillview Middle School in Menlo Park.  In the top picture to the left, Jonathan Schaff, a 7th grader who visited Achungo in June 2012, introduced Michael to his fellow students.

In the lower picture to the left, Michael stands in front of the bleacher seats that were filled with the 200 7th graders during his talk.

That was a large crowd of teens but they were silent and respectful throughout Michael's presentation.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Visit With Our Kenya Founder/Director

Michael Nyangi, the founder and Kenyan Director for Achungo Children's Center, is making his first trip to the Bay Area in late November (2012). Below are some of the events planned.

You should consider attending and meeting this incredible man who grew up a poor orphan, was sponsored through college and then, forgoing a lucrative career, began immediately to pursue a life focused on others.  His lifelong ambition was to work in a Bank.  Graduating with a CPA he was well-positioned and says he actually worked in a bank...for 1 week.  I think he was just destined for greater things.  Living in one of the world's largest slums (Kibera in Nairobi), he noticed a woman with a small child by the railroad tracks and worried that in her desperation she was considering suicide.  He had $20; he approached her and gave it to her, hoping it would help.  The next day, on his way to work, he saw her there again, but now she had corn and was roasting it over coals to sell.  A few days later he saw another woman similarly destitute, gave her his $20 and before the end of that week, both women were sitting together selling food to passersby.  It was thrilling to Michael to think about how little it took to make a difference in their lives (they eventually were able to move out of the slums and send their children to school, and even set up a small restaurant).

Michael was all of 22 and he began soliciting friends to join him by donating what they could -- often a dollar or less, and he eventually developed Lomoro, a micro-finance office of 15 staffers that helped more than 100 women of Kibera better themselves.  Lomoro eventually attracted a little support from an NGO called 1010project out of Colorado and those contacts led to Michael being a guest speaker at the UN General Assembly (October 2008) and  at a conference in Italy hosted by Amnesty International.

In 2005, at 24, Michael formed a local NGO (a Kenyan "Community Based Organization") that he called "Achungo Community Centre."  A few years before he had begun taking orphans into his own mud hut.  He had seen a group of 3- or 4-year-olds on the streets of the village, scrounging in the garbage for food and decided that he needed to find care for them.  He eventually found some widows to do the same and with his own meager funds rented a shed to use as a school. That eventually turned into Achungo, now with over 190 children and a staff of 13. .  

Saturday, December 1st (Mountain View)  -- Holiday Tea.
  • 12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m.    This will be a full service tea with presentations from Michael Nyangi as well as U.S. Director, Monte Fisher.
  • 100% of the proceeds go to Achungo operations in Kenya. 
  • Reservations required! 

OPEN EVENTS

Sunday, December 2 --Vantage African Partners Forum
  • 9:00 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.  Michael will share briefly at these services at Open Door Church, Mountain View (1667 Miramonte)
  • 12:15 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Michael and leaders of Ethiopia’s Hope Enterprise will take part on a panel of the Vantage African Partners Forum, hosted by Mark Swarner, Mission Pastor at MPPC.   
    • Light lunch. 
    • Held at Fellowship Hall at 950 Santa Cruz Avenue, Menlo Park. 
  • 7 p.m. – 8 p.m. Vantage African Partners Forum (details above) at Open Door Church, Mountain View. 
    • Fellowship Hall at 1667 Miramonte Ave. (at Cuesta), Mountain View. 

 Sunday, December 9  --  Saratoga Federated Church (20390 Park Place, Saratoga)
  • 11:45 to 1pm “Go and Tell” presentation by Michael and Monte. Opportunity to meet and greet.

For more information on any of these events, please contact Kathy Fisher:  kathyfisher1106@sbcglobal.net

Monday, December 26, 2011

The New Campus


On our first trip to Kenya (October 2010) we realized that there was an urgent need at Achungo for more land.  We have by now purchased the new site, fenced it and have begun construction.  But I’m getting ahead of my story.

In 2008 Saratoga Federated Church purchased a well for Achungo Children’s Center and the parcel of land where it was located.  Gifts from Germany built a 3-room cement block building for the preschool class, offices and a sleeping room.  In 2010 we put up a temporary classroom building of tin alongside the kitchen shed.  Between these buildings, the pump house and the latrine, there is little room left on this 1/3 acre parcel for the children to play and no room to build the additional classrooms we will eventually need for grades 5,6,7 and 8.  (We add a grade each year, adding 6th now in 2012).
There are a variety of other problems with the current site as a long-term campus:

  • The temporary classroom building has dirt floors and posts driven into the ground—it will not last long (the tin is already breaking loose in places) and the floor turns to little rivers in heavy rains.
  • The yard turns to deep, sticky mud during heavy rain and we saw the smaller children (3- and 4-year-olds) get stuck in it, unable to move their shoes until they cried in frustration.
  • Even in good weather, there just isn’t enough yard for now over-140 children to play.
In 2011 as the new 5th grade had to share space in the sleeping room, we began looking for more land.  We are close enough to the village crossroads that we were dismayed at the prices and lack of available land.  During the summer Michael thought we could purchase some adjacent land, but that fell through.  Eventually, he located a parcel about twice the size of our current one (about 200 meters away from it) and we put down a deposit to hold it as we tried to raise the funds to purchase it and to begin building.  In the end we were blessed in amazing ways even as we felt like failures, unable to develop a fundraising strategy.  By the end of September we were able to complete the purchase and since then have fenced the parcel, cleared it and have begun construction.

Our goal was to complete 3 classrooms in time for January school start.  The plan is to build a U-shaped building at the upper end of the site.  It will be block and cement construction with a tin roof and the room linked by a cement walkway, all elevated a few feet off the ground to stay free of runoff and mud even in the heaviest rains.   In November we broke ground on the first wing and have now completed the foundation that will support the 4 classrooms of that wing.  Construction has begun and we have most of the funds to complete those 4 classrooms along with the new latrine building at the other end of the parcel.

In 2012 we hope to find the funds to complete the entire campus, including all 9 classrooms, offices and library/computer room.   Then our attention will return to the old site where we need to build a kitchen and move out of the tin shed and its 3-stone fireplace.  We also plan to build an assembly room that can accommodate the entire school -- for meals, exams, and school assemblies.  Currently if it is raining, everyone packs into one of the classrooms for assemblies and it's such a tight squeeze it's hard to inhale (and I'm only slightly exaggerating!).

Sunday, November 20, 2011

News of Our School

The school of Achungo was born in 2005 as Director Michael Nyangi had recruited 2 widows with hearts for orphans who began to work with him both by taking care of orphans (along with their own children) and beginning to teach those who were unable to attend school due to cost.

Although Primary School (K-8) is tuition-free in Kenya, the indigent still cannot attend because they are required to pay for uniforms, shoes, books, school materials and exams.  Thus there are many children who fall through the cracks of the "free educational system" and Achungo addresses that need for our orphans.  We provide uniforms and other clothes and shoes, food, care, medicines and schooling (with school materials, exam costs and all other costs covered).  Although we have some beds at the children's center, nearly all of our children are always cared for in homes in the nearby community.  Although these are poor family units living in mud huts, they provide a sense of belonging and of integration into the greater community that no group home can provide.  See my blog article: http://achungo.blogspot.com/2011/01/notes-on-orphanage-care.html.   Most of the children are in homes with relatives, often aunts or grandmothers, but some are in homes of good Samaritans, often widows who also have their own children.


Achungo Staff

Founder and Director:    Michael Nyangi

Faculty
Headmaster :    Mr. Nelson Aketch
Assistant (or Deputy) Headmaster :    Mr. Eliakim Ochieng
Office Clerk :    Madam Nancy Akoko
Baby Class / Nursery / Middle Class:    Mrs. Dorcas Ouma
                                                                Mrs.Christine Kibwana
Pre-Unit (Kindergarten) :     Mr. Erick Olony
Class One (1st Grade):      Mr. Nelson Aketch
Class Two (2nd Grade):    Madame Esther Akinyi
Class Three (3rd Grade) :  Mr. John Mwai
Class Four  (4th Grade) :   Mr. Eliakim Ochieng
Class Five (5th Grade):     Madam Asha Okoth
Class Six (6th Grade):       Madame Emily Sumba

Other Staff
Cook:             Mrs. Mary Auma Okello
Asst. Cook:    Mr. Kennedy Odhiambo Oyolo                     
Caretaker in charge of water distribution:    Shadrack Charles Oketch

School Counts As Of September 2011

Class Size

Class        Student Count
1st                          17
2nd                         23
3rd                         17
4th                          13
5th                            9
Early Preschool       26
Preschool                12
Kindergarten            13

Grand Total              130

Our Farming Project

In 2010, after 2 years of supporting the food program at Achungo, Samaritan's Purse encouraged us to undertake a project that might move us toward self-sufficiency.  We had experimented a little with farming, so wrote a proposal for farming 11 acres which was then funded for the 2 planting seasons of 2010-2011 and has now been funded again for 2011-2012. 

The planting seasons in SW Kenya, coinciding with the rainy seasons, are in August/September ("short rains") and in March/April ("long rains").  The land is cleared as needed, then plowed with oxen and a plow with wooden handle and a metal blade (advanced from what we saw in Ethiopia where it was entirely wooden).  We had advice from some farming experts from the U.S. who showed us to plant more densely than is common in the area, to weed and fertilize twice after planting (and the fertilizing that preceded planting), and to do some ditching so that the runoff during heavy rains doesn't wash out the plants.  With these methods, we expected a better crop than is common and hoped to produce enough to gradually move toward self-funding subsequent crops while covering the costs of our food program at Achungo.

The 11 acres are not near the school but near Director Michael Nyangi's home, making use of a few acres of his own land at no cost and renting other land at often reduced cost based on his relationships with neighbors.  About 1/2 of the acreage is in the hills on significant slopes and the other half in lower and more level land.  The lower land retains water better and typically shows its advantage in the health, size and yield of the crops.

We've grown mostly maize because better cash crops could be at significant risk of theft since the plots are not guarded or near someone who could watch them.  We grew some beans the first season but have not done so since as the bean plants are more susceptible to damage from heavy rain and loss of bloom to chickens, among other risks.  Because we do not have adequate long-term storage for the maize, we sell much of it at the time of harvest when the price is at its lowest.  As such, the farming program has supported the food program costs to a great extent, but without much remainder.