Friends of Ngong Road

We empower Nairobi children living in poverty to transform their lives through education and support, leading to employment.

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May 7, 2018 By Kelvin Thuku Leave a Comment

Letter from Nairobi

August Camp Bells are Ringing

As you are probably aware, the students of the Ngong Road Children’s Foundation (NRCF) live mainly in the slums, where they live difficult lives and have limited exposure to good physical and social amenities. Because of this, the annual August Camp is truly the highlight of the year for our students. With gratitude for sponsors, donors, and dedicated volunteers, our thriving camps have flourished for a decade, improving annually.

August Camp has many educational, well-being, and social objectives, all set in a fun, learning environment. Camp strives to:

  • Provide unique, fun educational experiences.
  • Improve health and well-being.
  • Create a close-knit, supportive community, where students develop a strong sense of belonging and where they are exposed to and taught about good personal values.  
  • Develop leaders and teach leadership skills.
  • Provide a new view of the world to all who attend camp, both students and international volunteers alike.
  • Give students who live day-to-day lives in poverty and in difficult circumstances, the opportunity to just have fun and be kids in a safe environment.

The outcome is transformative, impacting students and volunteers from Kenya and abroad, altering lives through a profound experience. Our NRCF students are anxiously waiting for this year’s August Camp, which is scheduled for August 6th to 22nd. We’re crafting a dynamic program with indoor and outdoor activities to stimulate students both physically and mentally.

Run in an environment that encourages openness, the camp will include guest speakers who put emphasis on discipline. Hard work as cornerstones for success, as good classes to help students develop key personal and life skills to prepare them for their future careers. Help them grow up as responsible citizens.

I know our students are lucky to have both local and international sponsors and supporters who are touched by their plight and who generously sponsor their formal education. Camp goes beyond this and provides a means to develop the all-around person. As you can imagine, holding an off-site 17-day camp for our 377 students is costly. Against this background, in June we will be kindly inviting our enthusiastic supporters to make donations to ensure that every student gets the opportunity to attend this year’s camp.  

I sincerely thank all stakeholders for dedicating time and funds, vital to the success of our previous camps. Grateful! Be on the lookout to “Send a Kid to Camp” this June!

Maureen Mulievi
Program Director
Ngong Road Children’s Foundation

February 26, 2018 By Kelvin Thuku Leave a Comment

Tabitha

Tabitha told Friends of Ngong Road President and Founder, Paula Meyer, that she “never thought she would graduate from Form 4.” She knew it was not affordable on her family’s little income. Fortunately, she managed to accomplish that!

Jamie and Nancy Letcher have been sponsoring Tabitha since she joined the program . She and her mother were living with two of her aunts while struggling to make it in the slums of Nairobi. Her mother occasionally washed clothes for other families and sold odds and ends to get enough income for one meal a day.

Tabitha excelled in her primary school environment often performing at the top of her class. With her high eighth-grade exam score, led to Nairobi’s Ngara Girls Secondary School acceptance . Despite coming from an extreme poverty background, she performed well and made friends with students from diverse backgrounds. Tabitha scored good results on her Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education exam. She dreams of becoming a forensic scientist and will be applying to university in the fall.

Tabitha became the youth peer provider for the new sexual and reproductive health program before joining university. Fourteen students were trained through Planned Parenthood Global and eight selected to lead the training for their peers. While applying to post-secondary schools, she has attended our computer training course and Life Skills program led by Megan and Evan Feige of Minneapolis, MN. The program will expand later this year with a Rotary Global Grant with the South Metro Minneapolis Evenings Rotary club and the Kikuyu Rotary Club of Nairobi. She is a respected leader among her peers and an inspiration to her two younger brothers.

February 20, 2018 By Kelvin Thuku Leave a Comment

Letter from Nairobi

Dear Friends of Ngong Road,

We would like to extend our appreciation to our sponsors, donors, volunteers, and well-wishers for their great support in 2017. The year ended well and we are glad to report that we have started 2018 on a high note. However, while every day is becoming better and better at NRCF (Ngong Road Children’s Foundation), we have a significant and growing need for sponsors. Currently, we have a list of over 200 children that are waiting to be sponsored. It breaks our hearts when needy parents and guardians come to our office every day asking whether their child has been successful in getting a sponsor yet.

My Personal Experience

I was brought up in a family where my Dad was a firm believer in education. His philosophy of life was, “Instead of giving my children the fish to eat, I want to empower them to learn how to fish themselves”. He was a crusader for education for all, especially for girls, so he sent us all to school. In my rural community, most families did not educate girls because they believed that the girls would get married and any investment made in their education would benefit the marital family, not the parental family.

My Dad supported the education of many children (both relatives and non-relatives) and from an early age instilled in us the virtue of helping others. This involved sharing our home to accommodate the needy and even sharing our parents with the many children who referred to them as Dad and Mum for the support they received. From the lessons I learned from my Dad, I currently support the education of five children (both relatives and non-relatives) from my hometown in Malava, Kakamega County. They are at different levels of school ranging from university, middle-level colleges, high schools, and primary schools.

Typical African Philosophy

In Africa, the extended family benefits from the affluence of their kinsmen. One African proverb summarizes this: “Shorter trees in a forest climb on taller ones in order to survive”. Among the groups who benefit are the sick, the poor, the disabled, women, and children. For a long time, Africans have shouldered problems afflicting their parents, siblings, friends, relatives, and even neighbors. This included bringing them up. The better off provided food, shelter, clothes, education, medical care, and a supportive community. Providing such support is a common practice for most Kenyans.

The Kenyan Rural vs Urban Divide

However, the situation in urban centers is different. Many urban Kenyans already support family members so it is difficult for them to support needy children in the city who may have lost their entire families. For the few local Kenyans who do provide support to city children, they cannot commit for long, because they may have other responsibilities like family members or elderly parents in the village who are depending on them for their livelihood.

Most families of our sponsored children left their rural areas with the hope of finding greener pastures in the city. Most of them find themselves scratching out an existence in slums. High rates of poverty and unemployment usually characterize slums.

Many commonly view them as breeding grounds for social problems like crime, drug addiction, alcoholism, a high prevalence of mental illness, and suicide. Slum dwellers also exhibit a high incidence of disease due to unsanitary conditions, malnutrition, and lack of basic health care.

Why do we continue to need overseas sponsors?

Most of our children at NRCF reside in this kind of environment. They do not have economically stable relatives who can support them. Their parents or guardians work in casual manual jobs that pay a dollar or less a day. With the little money they have, most of them prioritize providing a single meal daily for the family over education for their children. Despite subsidized education, additional costs like books, uniforms, and transport lead impoverished children to abandon school in Kenya.

With the unstable political environment in Kenya during the last six months, the economy is not doing well. The burden is on the taxpayer who has also to overcome the rising cost of living to survive. Typically, available funds after meeting existing responsibilities towards the extended family are even lower than before.

As part of the NRCF family, we want to make the world a better place than we found it by touching the souls of those who are disadvantaged by fate. By doing so, their lives can be transformed. In return, they may touch other souls when they succeed in life. We, therefore, appeal to potential sponsors to join our NRCF family to assist these deserving cases. Giving is not because someone has excess wealth but rather because of the heart of giving.

I extend heartfelt thanks to NRCF program’s sponsors, donors, volunteers, and stakeholders for their unwavering dedication and selflessness.

Maureen Mulievi
Programme Director
Ngong Road Children’s Foundation

December 4, 2017 By Kelvin Thuku Leave a Comment

Letter from Nairobi to Sponsors

I take this opportunity to appreciate all our sponsors and supporters of the Friends of Ngong Road (FoNR) and Ngong Road Children’s Foundation (NRCF) organizations. Through your enormous support, we are able to achieve more every day and transform the lives of the many children that we support. Towards the end of October, I got an opportunity to travel to the U.S. to meet Friends of Ngong Road. The objectives of the visit were:

  • To meet and connect with our supporters. I shared my story with them in terms of family background, academic journey, past work experiences, and why I am very passionate about working with NRCF.
  • To meet and appreciate our sponsors and supporters in the U.S. for the great support we are receiving from them.
  • To share with our sponsors and supporters our achievements and 2018 plans.
  • To participate in the Portable Sanitation Association International (PSAI) Nuts and Bolts Conference. The conference is designed for portable sanitation suppliers and operators and provided a wealth of knowledge and connections for me as I have recently started leading Karibu Loo in Kenya.
  • Attend training at Minnesota Council of Nonprofits, Leading with a Theory of Change.
  • To speak in Professor Izabela Steflja’s Sustainable Development class at Tulane University.

I am happy to report that all the objectives were achieved through the support of our President, Paula Meyer, the Friends of Ngong Road Board (FoNR), FoNR staff, and many of the FoNR sponsors and supporters in the U.S.

I was humbled, thrilled, and grateful to meet so many strong supporters who make the program possible. As an NRCF team, we are ready to improve on the levels of achievement in order to make the program more vibrant. With the willingness of sponsors and supporters both in Kenya and the U.S., our ability to attain the mission of the organization is unfettered. This dovetails with our 2017 theme of “Ready, Willing, and Able.”

After meeting our enthusiastic sponsors and supporters, I wholeheartedly appreciate the sacrifice and endless efforts put in to make the program successful. I wish to thank in a very special way the President of FoNR, Paula Meyer for the warm reception and hospitality she accorded me when I landed in the great country. I felt at home since everyone did his/her best to make me comfortable. I can’t leave out Keith Kale and all the FoNR Board who hosted me on different occasions in Minneapolis and New Orleans.

Lastly, I promise to work tirelessly in order to ensure that the program is vibrant guaranteeing the less fortunate children a future. This is only possible with prudent management of resources. I am more than willing to work with both the Kenyan and U.S. teams to attain our organizational goals. Once more it is a big thank you to all.

May you have a Merry Christmas and a prosperous 2018.

Maureen Mulievi
Programme Director

September 25, 2017 By Kelvin Thuku Leave a Comment

Letter from Nairobi- Camps and US Trip

Dear Friends of Ngong Road,

We are so very busy here in Ngong Road! We had camps this year and a medical case for one of our students.

Camp 2017
In August we held successful Leadership, Grammar, and Senior Camps at Naromoru Girls School in Nyeri County over 13 days. This took place between 12th August and 24th August 2017. There was also a one-day camp in Nairobi for little kids on 25th August 2017. After Leadership Camp where 32 of our older students learned how to run the camp, three camps based on age groupings were held. Altogether 275 kids went camping, 97 to Grammar camp, 157 to Senior Camp, and 21 to Little Kids Camp.

The students enjoyed all sorts of activities ranging from team spirit-building, team competitions, music and dance, crazy games, tournament, and our own “Olympic games”. They also enjoyed rotations that comprised Arts and crafts (tie-dyeing a shirt) and educative lessons. The highlight of the camp was a field trip to Ol Pejeta Conservancy, the largest conservancy in Laikipia South. There we saw the “Big Five” (an elephant, leopard, buffalo, lion, and white and black rhinos). The students were also treated to a balanced diet of three meals a day.

Others who attended the camps were: 10 US volunteers, 5 NRCF Board members, NRCF Programme Director, 12 NRCF staff, one Kenyan sponsor (Chris Adams) accompanied by Emmanuel Gatimu (NRCF Founding Board member), 12 Post-Secondary students and 3 Karibu Loo staff.

There was a serious medical case of Bernard Ouma who was run over by a bus breaking his left leg femur and dislocating the right ankle. He was taken to Nanyuki Cottage hospital for surgery and was discharged after a week. He is recuperating and the doctors have assured us that he will recover fast owing to his age (19 years old).

We are grateful to all sponsors and well-wishers who donated towards this year’s camp and whose efforts enabled us to put smiles on the children’s faces and build a great NRCF family bond. Thumbs up to Tile and Carpet Centre here in Nairobi for donating most of the dry food used during camp.

Upcoming Trip to the USA
I am excited about my trip to the US which will give me an opportunity of meeting our treasured sponsors and donors. The trip commences with my departure from Nairobi on 27th October 2017. While in the US, I plan to attend the Portable Sanitation Association International (PSAI) Conference from 1st to 4th November 2017 in Minneapolis. The knowledge that I will gather from the conference will empower me with the skills of running Karibu Loo in a more effective and efficient manner.

After that my schedule includes several small group gatherings with individuals, businesses, and churches that support the program. It also includes participating in the Annual Gathering held at Surly in Minneapolis on 13th November. I am looking forward to a series of training programs including SalesForce training, Google training, and training titled Leading with a Theory of Change. I will be working with members of the FONR staff and board to finalize the NRCF 5-year Strategic Plan, and to present the 2018 NRCF Plan. I have been invited to attend the SMME Rotary Club Meeting and to visit Tulane University in New Orleans to make a presentation in a sustainable development class. Before I return to Nairobi, I will also spend a week with my friends and relatives in New York City. I will return to Kenya on 24th November 2017.

I am humbled by the responsibility bestowed upon me to manage Karibu Loo Limited as an additional responsibility. My team and I are equal to the task and are eager to steer that business to greater heights of achievement.

Thank you for supporting Ngong Road Children’s Foundation through Friends of Ngong Road. I look forward to meeting many of you soon.

Maureen Mulievi
Executive Director, Ngong Road Children’s Foundation, and
Acting General Manager, Karibu Loo

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Friends of Ngong Road
100 1st St S #581308
Minneapolis, MN 55458
(612) 568-4211 | info@ngongroad.org

EIN: 20-4690846

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