Thursday, 9 March 2006

Kenya: Rotary Reports

You can read very detailed reports about SCAW's distribution on the Rotary Nairobi, Kenya Web site. Below are a couple of excerpts:

From a report by Sylvia Mwichuli
After months of planning, the Sleeping Children Around the World project is finally underway and rolling smoothly. We finally begun the distribution today with a distribution coordinated by Rotarians Arthur Mattli and Kauli in Kibera.

For your information through this partnership project, which has been put together - with support from the SCAW Charity from Canada - 3,000 children are guaranteed a good nights sleep from now henceforth. We are delighted that through this and because they will each receive a bedkit containing the following items:
a) A mattress
b) A blanket
c) Sheets and pillow case
d) A pillow
e) A mosquito net
f) A towel
g) A stationery Set (pens, rubbers, sharpeners and books)
h) 2 sleeping suits (shorts and t-shirts suits
i) Pair of slippers
j) Bag
We are extremely excited about this project because the bedkits we will be handing out to the children will have a huge direct impact on their lives and be a great bolster to their livelihoods.
From a report by Mike Eldon:
The distribution started at 9.45, and before 12.30 they were through with all the picture taking and the distribution. Everything went so smoothly, thanks to the professionalism of the SCAW team, the superb organisational assistance from Nick Hutchinson and Evelyn Mungai from our club (plus many others behind the scenes in the build-up), and the usual magnificent performance by the Cura leaders.

With the 300th bedkit issued and everything packed, the Cura people couldn’t let their visitors get away without some words of thanks and a prayer. Evelyn thanked, Pastor George thanked, the headmaster of Cura Primary School, Mr. Nganga, thanked, and the wife of Bishop Ranji, representing her husband, thanked. ‘You have come from so far away,’ Evelyn told them, ‘to a country you did not know and to people who were strangers, and you opened your hearts to them.’

Then it fell to Duncan MacGregor, who had also been on last year’s expedition to Kenya, to reply. ‘You have all said “God bless you”’, he started, and then was overcome with emotion. ‘We are already blessed,’ he eventually managed to continue, and of course we had seen for ourselves how the very act of giving has these good people feel they are showered with blessings. ‘We spend a third of our lives asleep,’ Duncan said, ‘and it is our common interest to see these children enjoy their nights.’

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