Blog - Soroti; Uganda


Beacon of Hope Science Fair

Posted By Helen Hofman on 11.13.11 @ 11:06PM | Education, Education, Beacon Of Hope Secondary School, Beacon of Hope College, Soroti; Uganda

The team visiting Soroti from the Church of the Redeemer in Boston this past summer wanted to strengthen the science curriculum at Beacon of Hope School by organizing a science fair. Besides engaging the students and , increasing their enthusiasm for all science disciplines, this could guide them toward science professions, and give them useful knowledge applicable to everyday life in Uganda. Perhaps after accomplishing a small science fair, the students could gear up for larger ones, for visitors and family days.

 The first meeting was with the Director of Education Sam Ocen and his science faculty to discuss various possibilities for the science fair. It became quite obvious very early in the meeting that the teachers had many excellent ideas. One teacher had even participated in a science fair when he was a student. He knew firsthand the benefits of hands-on experimentation since a question on his subsequent A level exam concerned one of the experiments in his earlier science fair. He aced the question.

In order to focus attention and to make the science fair manageable within the period of time allotted, two or three experiments were selected for each disciplines, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, and Agriculture-- demonstrations that would be visually stimulating, and relevant to everyday life.

The fair was scheduled for the following Wednesday afternoon. Lloyd Dahmen set up schedules and gathered needed materials from the science buildings and found others in the town of Soroti. The teachers selected a range of experiments for each science division. For Physics: resistance heating by an electrical current, and the effect on density of dissolving salt in water (egg floats in salt water, sinks in pure water). Chemistry would demonstrate : fractional distillation of ethanol, preparation of soap, and the preparation of salts. Microscope viewing of prepared slides and student prepared slides showing the cell formation in onions, various tests for vitamin C in vegetables using locally prepared indicators, and the deleterious effect of boiling on vitamin C were the selected demonstrations for Biology.

Finally, for Agriculture: goat castration and subsequent examination of its alimentary canal, and the examination of the reproductive tract in a hen. To perform these experiments, we needed to acquire a 12 V automobile battery which could also be used later for other electrical experiments, six eggs, a half kilo of salt, fat for soap manufacture, a he-goat, and rental of a castration tool. We also discovered that the school had six student microscopes which could be used along with the excellent Zeiss microscope, which we had brought along. The student microscopes needed a thorough cleaning, which was cheerfully done by Emily Sampson and Kristen Matchett.

By Tuesday, any concerns about readiness and enthusiasm were gone. The students were rehearsing their explanations, the distillations were bubbling away, and everyone had been busy making signs and charts for each department's experiments.

On Wednesday at 2 p.m., Patrick Ongodia, Pilgrim's In-Country Director, began with introductions at the usual assembly spot under the giant fig tree. Under the neighboring tree was the first demonstration, Agriculture, wherin the he-goat gave his all for science. Incidentally, there was one student who had evidently done this many times, and was thoroughly at home with all phases of the experiment, including the final butchering of the carcass which was then turned over to the kitchen to be prepared for the evening meal. One of the hens actually had an egg in the process of manufacture which added to the verisimilitude of the demonstration.

The crowd of students dispersed to the various Physics, Biology, and Chemistry demonstrations in the science rooms, crowding about tables and even standing on benches to see. The microscopes were in constant use with students politely  taking turns viewing as many of the 100 prepared slides as possible. Fortunately, it was a sunny day, so the microscope reflecting mirrors had plenty of light.

The fair ended at four o'clock, followed by a rousing volleyball game, and hopefully a commitment for many more science fairs in the future.

(Thanks to Lloyd Dahmen for this report, and to others on the team for photographs)

Related Links: Beacon Of Hope Secondary School

Diocese of Soroti Receives 2 Million Doses of Deworming Meds for Local Distribution

Posted By Helen Hofman on 7.20.11 @ 8:16AM | Relief , Agathos Aid And Relief, Community Health Evangelism, De-worming Medicine, Orphan Care, Pastors' Conferences, Vitamin A, Soroti; Uganda, World Concern

The Diocese of Soroti, Uganda, is the newest partner for Pilgrim's distribution of deworming medication. Pilgrim's Aid & Relief Program, supplied with medications through the Agathos Foundation, delivered 2 million doses of mebendezole, a deworming medicine, to the offices of the Diocese of Soroti in early July. World Concern, a non-profit humanitarian organization providing community development and disaster responses, donates these medicines to the Agathos Foundation and Pilgrim for distribution. Bishop George Erwau of the Diocese of Soroti received the meds on behalf of the Church of Uganda (Anglican) from Rev. Dorsey McConnell, Pilgrim Board President, at the offices of the Diocese. Rev. MCConnell was accompanied by James Ochan, Pilgrim Operations Manager, and Patrick Ongodia, Pilgrim Country Coordinator. The Church of Uganda (CoU) will distribute these doses to outlying villages and church clinics in the Teso region, as well as to local hospitals and other clinics.

Dr. Oonyhu Taabon, a retired physician who volunteers with the Diocese, cited Matt 11:5, as he talked about the church's work among the Teso people. "This is the place of the church-the sick are healed, and the gospel is preached this way." He will be assisting with distributions of these much-needed meds.

Deworming is an important public health intervention with immediate benefits for children in poverty. One dose of mebendazole kills all kinds of intestinal worms for 6 months, allowing children the full nutritional benefit from their food. Intestinal worms can steal up to a quarter of the food a child eats, and further weaken the immune system. When mebendazole is administered with vitamin A, the combination boosts immunity for vulnerable children, and can mean survival for many. As part of a deworming and micronutrient consortium of humanitarian and aid groups, Pilgrim receives and distributes millions of donated doses of both these meds in sub-Saharan Africa through partnerships with local organizations.

Related Links: Pastors' Conferences

Let it Rain!

Posted By Helen Hofman on 6.30.11 @ 1:55PM | Beacon of Hope College Projects, Education, Education, Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program, Beacon of Hope College, Soroti Town, Soroti; Uganda, Uganda, Church of the Redeemer

This is the first of several posts I (Helen, the Communications Director from the Seattle office) is posting from Soroti during a several week visit. The first stop of course was Beacon of Hope College, just a few minutes away from the hotel.

Director of Education Sam Ocen introduced me and several of the visiting team from Church of the Redeemer in Boston to the teachers of the science department. A science fair is being planned for this week (more on that in a later post). Then Sam showed me around the campus. We visited the just-completed rainwater harvest system, operational less than 3 weeks. The water level in the gauge, a clear plastic tube parallel to the side of a huge black tank, was too low to be seen. That meant the school had almost used up the water collected off the tin roofs of two sides of two long buildings. The city of Soroti had no water for 3 days, and this was day 3. The school survived on the water that had collected since May 31 in the two large (60,000 liters each) tanks. Over those 3 days they used about 40,000 liters total. The water came back on in Soroti, and the water was replenished during a thunderstorm on June 27. The harvesting system was finished just in time for a real life test, and it worked!

The CU-EWB team had to add gutters to the roof edges, ensuring that all were at angles for the water to collect into a main pipe that filled the tanks. They even had to hammer together their own ladders! The gutters emptied into piping that fills the storage tank; the water is filtered, and clean, free water is accessible at two spigots. The system even has an overflow system. With completion of this collection system, the school no longer has to rely exclusively on city water.
The project was two years in the making. The team made assessments during the 2009 and 2010 visits, and swung into action in May 2011. The rainwater harvesting system saves the school significant operating costs, and provides solutions for other water-related problems. Water to the school goes out several times a week, which means the students must walk 5-6 k to get well water, or the school's administration must buy water in town. This takes a lot of time away from studies, and exposes the female students to potential danger. Women, especially young ones, simply are not safe to walk around town after school hours.

Read the CU-EWB team's great blog here. Thanks to Harrison, David, Allison, and all those other CE EWB folks who took part in this. More thanks to Julius, the determined, strong and ever-inventive handyman at Beacon of Hope School! Also thanks for great photos I stole off your blog!   

Related Links: Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program

Pilgrim Holds Sustainable Rural Technologies Meetings at Makerere University

Posted By Helen Hofman on 5.10.11 @ 2:30PM | Teso University, Education, Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program, Teso University, Beacon of Hope College, Teso University Project, Kampala, Uganda, Soroti; Uganda

Dorothy Echodu spent time in Uganda last month with a team from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. The group led groundbreaking workshops in Sustainable Rural Technologies at Makerere University in Kampala. Dorothy, the Director of Pilgrim's Teso University Project, has been active in enlisting US university staff to teach sustainable technology as one of the two initial programs planned for the launching of Teso University in Teso, northern Uganda.

 The US team was led by Dr. Andy Danylchuk, and included Dr. James Webb, Dr. David Damery (Dept. of Environmental Conservation (ECO)) and Dr. Craig Hollingsworth (U Mass Extension). Dr. James Webb has been working with the Teso University Project researching and designing an environmentally friendly and economically viable aquaculture project for Teso. 

On Wednesday, Dr. David Damery, Director of the Building and Construction Technology program within ECO led the first workshop on "Green Construction in Uganda". The workshop was attended by architects, engineers, academics, and Government Ministry officials from across the capitol city. The workshop revealed that topics such as adaptive reuse and embodied energy are not foreign terms within the building construction industry in Uganda, and that there is considerable desire to use alternative construction techniques to increase the sustainability of the build environment throughout the region.

Dr. Andy Danylchuk, Asst. Professor of Fish Conservation within ECO next directed the entire team for two days of workshops entitled "Pathways for Aquaculture in Uganda". Practitioners, academics, and consultants from across the country participated in discussion, demonstrations, and strategic planning for future aquaculture development in this East Central African nation. The workshop took an integrative systems thinking approach to help identify challenges and opportunities to the aquaculture industry in Uganda. All participants were encouraged by the collective sharing of information as well as the potential role the new university in the Teso region will play in helping the aquaculture industry move forward in Uganda.

This work is generously supported by a grant from the Clarence and Anne Dillon Dunwalke Trust. 

Below are the workshop slides and a photo gallery of the Pilgrim event, plus a video Andy Danylchuk produced for FishForward's channel on YouTube. 

Other Media

Documents

Acrobat (PDF) Document

Teso Aquaculture 1
Download (4.83MB, pdf)

Acrobat (PDF) Document

Teso Aquaculture 2
Download (475Kb, pdf)

Related Links: Teso University, Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program

A Day at Beacon of Hope College

Posted By Phyllis Ruud on 4.18.11 @ 6:25PM | Beacon of Hope College Projects, Education, Beacon Of Hope Secondary School, Beacon of Hope College, Soroti; Uganda, Church of the Redeemer

Students report for the first class at 7:30 in the morning dressed smartly in their uniforms.   The older Seniors 5’s and6’s are dressed in blue shirts and black shirts/trousers, and the lower classes have white shirts and green skirts/trousers  

If we were in the courtyard between buildings, we could hear the voices of lecturing teachers. Mr. Omiat is talking about the Great Lakes region in the US or Lake Victoria in Geography.  Mr. Orena is explaining how to find the area of a sphere.  Both of these teachers are good at getting the students to relax, laugh and have fun while they are learning.  .  A hand bell rings to indicate the end of this class period.

Mid-morning there is a 30 minute tea break between classes.  Teachers gather in the staff room to enjoy tea.  Students spread out over the compound…some hitting the books and others catching a few minutes of a soccer game.  

Again the handbell rings and students and teachers head back to class.  Some teachers have free time, and visit on the benches on the bench on the administrative building veranda or take a couple of chairs and sit under the tree while correcting assignments and overseeing the school compound.  A boda boda {Ugandan all-purpose taxi] goes through the compound delivering tomatoes and onions or the meat for lunch.  A visitor signs in with security at the gate and reports to the Head Teacher’s office.  A parent is waiting on the veranda to see their child.

The next handbell means lunch time. While some students head for the kitchen to get lunch, others participate in 15 minutes of singing praise and a time of prayer which fills the compound with the reminder that it is a Christian school.  Later in the afternoon, the Scripture Union leadership meet for a time of prayer in the Chaplain’s office. They may be meeting behind closed doors, but their fervent cry to the Lord overflows into the administrative block and beyond.

The road running in front of the school compound is always busy during the day with trucks, taxis, bodas and pedestrians.  The squealing of a baby pig echoes off the neighboring house.  The gobbling of the family of turkeys that has taken up their abode in the compound continues behind the administrative building.  Native birds sing.  A baby cries and children play.  The sound system of a neighboring vendor is turned on at its highest volume.

The last bell of the afternoon is at 5:00. Students pour out of their classrooms and toward the hostels. After changing into casual uniforms – Tshirts and black pants or skirts, some begin a volleyball game at one end of the compound.  Maybe a soccer game begins on the other end of the compound.  After supper, students gather in their classrooms for study and discussion until it is time to close their books for the day and return to their hostels.  Before students crawl into their beds and without a complaint from neighbors, a time of corporate praise and prayer rises heavenward from each hostel.  Another day has drawn to a close, another day in which these students can grow, recover from past difficulties, and anticipate a future much brighter than their pasts.   

Related Links: Beacon Of Hope Secondary School

More Letters of Thanks from Beacon of Hope

Posted By Helen Hofman on 3.10.11 @ 9:37PM | Education, Education, Beacon Of Hope Secondary School, Beacon of Hope College, Soroti; Uganda

"Now what I would like to say is that may the Almighty God who blesses people bless you, your children and your country so much." So writes Rita, a student at Beacon of Hope College in Soroti. Her letter was one of many from the students there who wrote Pilgrim with thanks for making education available to so many who have no other access.  Here are more excerpts from the packet of letters that arrived at the Seattle Pilgrim office.

"The main aim of writing to you this letter is to appreciate you for all the mighty things you have done to me and our family at large for giving me a sponsorship. This has opened my eyes, individually made me responsible and hopeful in every aspect of life and above it all has enrichly laid out a bright future.  My sincere thanks and greetings goes to all Pilgrim partners and donors for the faith to donate which has made nothing to something. I pray for blessings, success and favour in all you set plans."  -Stephan

"The main reason for writing this letter to you is to thank you for availing me free education. I am now looking forward to see my future ahead and I am working very hard to achieve my goals. My favorite subjects are accounts and geography. I would like to become an accountant in future if God wishes because he is the provider of everything and I can't do anything without him. I am ending saying thank you very much may God bless you."   - Priscilla

"I appreciate you for the help you have offered to me most especially education. I had no hopes of continuing my education when my parents passed away. But I want to thank the Almighty God who used Pilgrim as his servants to come and serve us. Now I am at school working hard to achieve my goal and I want to become a great woman in future. Once more I say thank you very much for your support and my Almighty God bless the work of your hands and your families."   - Emimmer

"I want to thank you for your sponsorship and support to us and for providing us food. We are enjoying posho and beans so much. May God bless you and bless the work of your hands for ever and forever Amen."   -Joan

"I am really very grateful for you sponsoring me, for even paying the fees, the meals and the treatment you have provided for me. I really got a big challenge and faced many problems in my life. Now that you are sponsoring me I report that I am free from challenges and therefore am going to concentrate well in class and be among the best in the school a school of great standard. Thank you for the help."  -Felistus

"Thanks for having given me the opportunity to have a free education. I pray may the Almighty God who appointed you to help me add you more and more blessings. May the sovereign God give you success in everything you do.  I know God has a purpose for you and me. He knew he chose me to be under sponsorship and he knew that you were going to help me... I feel good when I am at school. My father has 10 children and out of the 10 I am the only one who falls under free education. Thanks for helping my dad." - Norbert

To contribute to the education fund for Beacon of Hope College, donate here. 

Related Links: Beacon Of Hope Secondary School

Thank You Letters from Beacon of Hope Students

Posted By Helen Hofman on 2.24.11 @ 9:16PM | Education, Education, Beacon Of Hope Secondary School, Ecucation Support, Soroti Town, Soroti; Uganda

"I could not even dream to have a peaceful education like this that you have provided for me. I was praying hard to see to it that I could go to school. God is not blind. May God bless you." These  words are from a thank you letter that Juventine, a student at Beacon of Hope College, wrote recently showing her appreciation for the sponsorship Pilgrim has extended to her.  Many students at Pilgrim's high school are totally sponsored, and these youth receive free education, room, board, medical care, spiritual care, and in many cases, counseling treatment for trauma sustained during civil conflict.

Here are more excerpts from the letter packet. Be blessed as you read these notes! 

"The main reason I am writing this letter is that I thank you for what you have done to my life in this place. The organisation Pilgrim is very important in my life because now I am sponsored form this school and now I am enjoying a good standard of living. They are treating me without me paying any amount of shillings. I would like to conclude by saying may God bless you Pilgrim in all hands because you are taking care of my life from this school."  — Misaki

"I really longed for this year, but at last, God answered my prayer and you accepted me as an orphan. Thank you for helping the orphans, poor, and street children."  — Tino

" I am very happy and may God bless you. I hope I am going to do well at school becaues even there the teachers are good and we are eating food that makes me feel that I am not an orphan."  — Francis

"I am very happy for what you have done to me and I know now that I will achieve my future. For God says "I have picked you from Egypt and now go and save me." That is why I thank Pilgrim for picking me form where I was." Spiritual services and better standards of education I have achieved are the reasons why I appreciate Pilgrim since I had a negative attitude toward life because of meaningless background." — Daniel

"I am so delighted with the sponsorship you offered for me. When I was at home I had no hope of education because my parents were poor and could even take me to school all of my relatives were proposing me to get married and by that time I lost confidence of education but now through the sponsorship you truly gave to me has made me to see my vision of a future. I pray you have made our family to be grateful and successful. Above all may God the Creator of all the universe bless you abundantly and may his grace continue to be revealed to you."  — Moses

 "I really appreciate you for the hands of support you stretched out to me. I am happy and joyous that I am at school because you gave me sponsoring. May the Almighty God bless you and add you more energy." — Nancy

You can help fund education for these Ugandan young people here. Currently the cost for 1 student at Beacon of Hope College is $600 a year.

Related Links: Beacon Of Hope Secondary School

Energy Efficient Stoves Introduced in Teso

Posted By Helen Hofman on 2.17.11 @ 10:01AM | Agriculture, Agriculture, Beacon Of Hope Secondary School, Soroti; Uganda

Pilgrim's Agriculture and Environment Programs reports progress in several projects involving environmentally friendly cooking stoves, and their adoption on a community level.  First, Beacon of Hope School now has new stoves, and they are a major improvement!  Until last semester, all cooking was done in huge pots balanced on rocks encircling a wood fire. Can you imagine cooking a large pot of boiling porridge this way? (See before and after photos below)  The food in the pots is a cornmeal mush called posho that is a staple of the Ugandan diet. The installation of four institutional-size energy efficient cooking stoves is complete, and they are now in use and cookin' away. The stoves use considerably less fuel - 3 tons of wood during the last 3-month term instead of the usual 12 tons!  That lowered amount of wood for fuel makes a huge difference, over even a short time, in the deforestation that is taking place in Uganda.  Besides saving money, less time is spent in finding, purchasing and handling firewood.  Another very significant change these stoves bring is a health benefit, as they reduce the risk of upper respiratory infections for the kitchen workers.  No longer do they breathe in the wood smoke from the open fires. The new stoves have provided a good on-site demonstration for the students of an environmentally responsible and sustainable change that brings improvement in multiple areas.

These new kind of cookstoves can improve the way the average rural Ugandan cooks. Pilgrim will be distributing 20,000 very efficient cookstoves, called rocket stoves, to the members of the farmer cooperatives we work with and their surrounding communities. Pilgrim will also provide trainings in the advantages and use of these carbon zero stoves.

The Agriculture and Environment Department already conducted a pilot training in the construction and utilization of a variant of these efficient cook stoves, also called Lorenna stoves, in partnership with the Center for Research in Energy and Environmental Conservation (CREEC) affiliated with Makarere University. As these stoves are constructed of locally available materials, each and every household that gets a stove will not just know how to use it but also how to construct it once the life-span of the first set is over.  These stoves have 1-pot or 2- pot capabilities, with removable loose fitting pots which sit in the round cavities accessible from the top surface. The thermal insulated walls are made of locally available inexpensive mud mixed with sawdust, pumice or any available agricultural waste. This insulation focuses most of the heat onto the bottom of the removable loose fitting pan that sits in the round cavity. The stoves are so efficient because the insulation focuses the heat from the wood fire to the bottom pan, and because so little of the heat is lost through the thick walls of the stove. Although most cooking in the region will still be done with wood, it can be done with greatly improved efficiency. Carbon dioxide emissions and smoke will considerably be reduced, and each individual's/household carbon foot print, and contribution to environmental degradation will be reduced.

Non-photo illustrations below from Ugandan Gov't publicationhttp://www.energyandminerals.go.ug/pdf/gtz/brochure_ee_rsdom.pdf  

 

Related Links: Beacon Of Hope Secondary School

Relief Goods Distributed in Kampala and Teso

Posted By Helen Hofman on 1.30.11 @ 12:49AM | Relief , Agathos Aid And Relief, Beacon Medical Centre, Beacon Of Hope Secondary School, Clothing, Kampala, Uganda, Soroti; Uganda, Teso Region, Teso Safe Motherhood Project, World Concern

Pilgrim's Agathos Relief and Aid Program completed the distribution of clothing, hundreds of yards of fabric, and musical keyboards donated to Pilgrim, and transported to Uganda courtesy of Thain Boatworks and Earthwise Ventures. Included were thousands of new clothing items from a Seattle, WA clothing distributor, dozens of musical keyboards given to Pilgrim, and numerous rolls of cotton flannel donated by World Concern in Edmonds WA.  

 Pilgrim Uganda's Director of Relief, William Denis Omara, organized and directed the multi-site distribution effort. Six staff from Pilgrim travelled with him to transport and give out the goods; they were assisted by volunteers at each distribution point or village. Targeted recipients for this distribution were the elderly, women with small children, pregnant women, the disabled, and most destitute of each area. The elderly in Ugandan society are often very needy if they have no living children to support them. Each beneficiary received two pieces of clothes; mothers received fabric for baby blankets and diapers, and elderly persons were given flannel fabric for bed sheets.

One distribution site was Namuwongo Revival Church, an inner city church pastored by Pastor Opio Wilson, located in Namuwongo, a large slum in Kampala. Clothing, mostly pants and shirts, and fabric yardages were handed out to the needy, amid much rejoicing (see photos).  These were timely "Christmas presents" to about 600 church members.

Teso Safe Motherhood, a sister nonprofit in Teso, NE Uganda, assists pregnant women and new mothers in the Teso region.  The many rolls of cotton flannel given to that organization will in turn be divided to give out to new mothers for their babies' needs.

Many rolls of fabric were given to the Beacon of Hope Medical Center for various uses such as sheets and nursing needs. The students at Beacon of Hope College received fabric yardage to make bed sheets. The majority of students at the College are completely sponsored by Pilgrim, so this fabric donation helped keep supply costs down. 

The final distribution sites were the vulnerable population of Amotom IDP (internally displaced person) Camp in the Amuria subdistrict, and the village of Kapelebyong, also in Amuria. Local government officials assisted William Omara's staff with the identification of the most needy, assembling people, and distribution.  Notice the large but orderly crowds gathering to line up for clothing and fabric in the photos.

The final kinds of items distributed were piano keyboards. As Pilgrim works with local churches, finding eager takers for these keyboards was not difficult.

Pilgrim's distributions activities of food and other things to the most needy occur when significant amounts donations are given, and often in cooperation with other organizations.  A special thanks to Thain Boats and Earthwise for their generous gift of shipping these goods for Pilgrim.

Related Links: Beacon Of Hope Secondary School, Beacon Medical Centre

Ugandan and US High Schools Connect

Posted By Helen Hofman on 8.11.10 @ 4:28PM | Beacon of Hope College Projects, Education, Beacon Of Hope Secondary School, Beacon of Hope College, Book & Computer Drive for Beacon of Hope Students, Soroti; Uganda, West Auburn Washington

Nancy Olsten, a language arts teacher from West Auburn High School, and strong advocate for Pilgrim, initiated a letter exchange program between her classes at the high school and BoH. Her initial idea was to expose her students to situations in Africa, sensitizing them to their counterparts in other countries and life situations. The students had been studying Global Issues, led by Tom Parsons, the Social studies teacher at the school, reading A Long Way Gone and discussed colonialism and other issues raised by the book. They had also studied the history of the Lord's Resistance Army and learned the background of many of the students to whom they would write.

For the initial mailing to Beacon of Hope, Nancy's seniors made a video introducing themselves and their school; this had footage of each of Nancy's students, and some of their classes and a tour of the school. The first packet of letters was sent over in October, carried by Calvin Echodu. Several of the language arts teachers at BoH engaged their classes in the exchange, and that first packet of letters was answered by about 30 Ugandan students. Two entire rounds of letters have taken place, with students responding personally to one or more students.

Nancy took some of the art work from the Ugandan letters to post on bulletin boards in the halls in Auburn; this provoked questions and interest among other teachers. Now there is interest in a fund raising effort at the school, and possibly involvement with the Auburn Rotary.

Calvin visited Nancy's class in May to speak to them about his experiences growing up in the conflict in NE Uganda. The Auburn class had a second packet of letters ready for him, as well as a special drum they had constructed a drum as a gift for the BoH students. Fashioned out of a section of large diameter PVC pipe, it was covered with a stretched leather, then signed by all the class.

Nancy hopes to continue this project next year with her classes, and is hoping that teacher s at BoH will also continue the project.

Related Links: Beacon Of Hope Secondary School

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