Friday, February 22, 2013
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Your Love is Powerful
Your love has opened our doors to 641 students this year.
Hundreds of little feet ran, skipped and jumped into the school yards where they will find a brighter future.
In
Uganda, 38% of all children under the age of six suffer from stunting
due to chronic malnourishment. Sixty preschool-aged children will
simultaneously gain weight and knowledge this year because of you.
YOU have saved Moreen (pictured below) and her friends from poverty. Thank you.
156 students
including the newly graduated primary 7 students-
are heading off to secondary school.
YOU have given each student a uniform, shoes and a warm sweater for chilly Ugandan mornings.
Because of YOU little boys and girls are carrying the books and supplies they need to fill this year to the brim with learning.
YOU have
lovingly ensured each student will have access to clean water, a
friendly school nurse, healthy meals and snacks, and a safe place where
they can just be children.
Your love is powerful.
Thank you for loving these little ones and their grannies.
In humble gratitude,
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Kelly Voss
Director of Development
P.S. Want to take the trip of a lifetime? Check out the details on our 2013 Inaugural Women's Trip to Uganda! Join us NOW!
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A Message from Alexis
As an International Relations student at Michigan State, my
email inbox is constantly full of internship opportunities with various state
representatives in Lansing, it had gotten to the point where I hardly even
looked at the emails MSU sent me because I knew none of the political
opportunities interested me.
Then one day in August, right before heading back to school, I
got an email about an internship opening with the Nyaka AIDS Orphans Project. I
thought, “Well, hey, that doesn’t sound very political at all!” I continued to
read the message, and the first sentence informing me that Nyaka provides free
education to HIV/AIDS orphans in southwest Uganda sold me. The second sentence
told me about the grandmothers who take care of these orphans and their role in
the students’ development. The third sentence was about Nyaka’s gravity fed
clean water project, nutrition program, the library, and the new Mummy Drayton
clinic. I was sold. I’ve always been interested in International Development,
but Nyaka was the perfect combination of everything that interested me from
education to sustainable development.
A couple of weeks later I was hired as the Communications Intern
for the fall 2012 semester. Working in the office at Nyaka is not your typical
job filled with menial tasks, but instead a rewarding and fulfilling adventure
where you actually see the difference you are making in lives of thousands of
Ugandans. Nyaka’s staff exemplifies passion and commitment to their world
changing work—something that is very rare in today’s society.
I’ve worked with other nonprofit organizations before, but I
have never come across the innovation and holistic approach that Nyaka
embodies. The Nyaka AIDS Orphans Project works at kicking poverty’s butt! I
would highly recommend getting involved through sponsorships, volunteering, or
even just reading Jackson’s book, A School For My Village. Nyaka will change the way
you see the world, I promise.
Alexis served as our Communications Intern and is working this year at Life Choices, a non-profit dedicated to youth development in Cape Town, South Africa.