Peacemakers-International

General

Prayer House Update

PROGRESS OF THE PEACEMAKERS RESOURCE CENTRE KENYA

Members of the Peacemakers UK Team visited Kenya in February & March this year to oversee the work and progress of the Centre. You will see from the photograph below, that the Prayer House was near completion.


Peacemakers International - Runyenjes Prayer House.

Pastor Selesio Njiriru, one of the Peacemakers’ Team in Kenya, is in the foreground.  He is soon to retire from his secular job in Nairobi and will be able to serve the community full time.  Also our long standing friend Patrick Nyaga Kavunguru.  We are all anxious to see this project and vision completed and fully functional and for the local community to be responsible, serving with their gifts, meeting the local needs and for the people locally to benefit.


One of the side rooms for the abandoned baby unit.

I'm now able to inform you that 3 months on, the Prayer House has been finished, the ground around is being leveled, concreted and grassed, followed by the planting of flowers and shrubs.

The furnishings will be purchased within the next 2 months and the Prayer House ready to be used as a retreat and a place for the youth in the area to gather.  The Prayer House will be a multi purpose building and the youth will be able to turn it into a Theatre and perform plays from time to time. It will also be hired out for weddings, conferences etc., as a means of raising money and making it self supportive.

There are 3 adjacent rooms around the rear of the Prayer House, one of them will be turned into an ‘Abandoned Baby’ Refuge/Counseling room, the second a temporary office/side room to stage and the third, which opens into the interior of the Prayer House, a store room/stage.


The land for phase 2 and 3 - a bit of a challenge to say the least!

Draft plans have been drawn up for the second phase and transferred to Kenya for a local Architect to draw and submit for planning permission.

Brenda Marshall

Two Sports Seminars in Embu.

            TWO SPORTS GROUP SEMINARS 

                     IN KENYA JULY 2009


Kim Henderson, who is the PE and Sports Strategic Manager of the London Borough of Barnet, will be holding two more teacher / pupil sports training seminar in July in the Embu district of East Kenya.

Two years ago Kim held a residential teacher training course at the Moi Secondary school for over 100 delegates from primary schools. At the end of this very successful week, Certificates of Attendance were presented to those who had attended for the whole week. Sports equipment was given to all the delegates on their return to their schools, with a covering letter to their Head teacher stating such, so that they could impart to their pupils the training that they had received.

This time Kim is having two cluster groups at different venues. The first three day cluster will be two teachers and at least 4 pupils from six secondary schools selected to attend the seminar daily. The second cluster will be a similar seminar with six different secondary schools represented at the second venue. The venues chosen will have indoor and outdoor facilities to accommodate participation.

Kim is one of the many professionals from the UK who is willing and happy to give up her holiday period and cover her own flight expenses to freely share her expertise and skills with the Kenyans. In Kenya up until 5 years ago, all children could only attend school if their parents paid school fees and school uniforms were, and still are, compulsory. Now primary school education is free, but secondary schools are not.

Very little money, if any, is given to the schools by the government for equipment, so each time we have a teaching seminar, basic equipment is needed as teaching aids. For this training to be developed in the schools represented, extra equipment will be bought and given to each group of delegates to take back to their school. Again Certificates of Attendance will be presented.

If you wish to support this work and give a donation for sports equipment to go into other schools , then please send your gift to me and I will guarantee that every penny that is given will go to this project.
 
Thank You
Brenda Marshall
Director of Peacemakers International
Email: brenda@peacemakers-international.com

Eye Clinic

This was my second visit to Kenya; the first being in 2005 when we helped set up a Primary Healthcare course and assisted with a free eye clinic with an Optician from the UK.


This time we were doing a similar thing but the Optician was a Kenyan, whose name was James. He actually was also a retired surgeon. Accompanying us too were Christine, a retired Administrator and Elizabeth, a Practice nurse from Great Amwell. Christine worked in the Optician's room whilst Liz assisted me on a part time basis. There were several young Kenyans on hand to assist with translations. 



The first day at the eye clinic was pretty steady, patients walking various distances from Runyenjes and Embu to have a free eye test and if needed a free pair of glasses. But then of course word got out on the Kenyan grapevine that we were carrying out these free eye tests and boy the next day they were queuing from 7.30 in the morning!

Thankfully the weather picked up too, because the first two weeks in August in Kenya had been pretty cold, but we were told that it could be cool at this time of year. They also had had a reasonable amount of rain which was unusual. We started the day at roughly 8:00am to 8.30 and finished at 5:00pm. The majority of the patients we saw were either Cataract or Glaucoma patients but we did have to carry out a minor operation or should I say the Optician did with the help of Christine. The patient had managed to get a husk of a small plant (unsure what plant) imbedded in his eye which the Optician managed to remove thankfully, and I should think the patient was pretty glad too.


We bought the glasses through donations to Peacemakers. The total number of patients seen were 750, 622 of these received glasses. Patients needing Cataract operations came to 25 and 6 Glaucoma. So I think the majority of patients went away happy. The good news is that we have been able to underwrite all of the Glaucoma and 6 of the Cataract operations.


The Snellen Eye Charts were provided free of charge by Vision Aid International.

Summary of Events 2008.

CHRISTMAS 2008 (a review of the year)

 

This year has been difficult for most people , if not all, with the credit crunch and people losing their jobs and homes, but despite all this, friends of Peacemakers have continued supporting financially and sponsoring a whole variety of projects.

 
For the full story - please click on the link below.

A Christmas Message 2009

Last Christmas I was sharing with you that the plans for the various multipurpose buildings for the Resource Centre had been drawn up and submitted for approval.  I’m happy to inform you that approval has been given and the Prayer House has now been completed.  We have also successfully purchased a further ΒΌ acre of land adjacent to the plot for £2,250.00.  This extra piece of land has made an amazing difference to what we can achieve on site, it’s given us enough space to build a house to accommodate people giving their time and expertise to the various training courses and events planned on site.  This house is now being built and completion is expected around February 2010.  GREAT!

In February this year, Christine Gibbard, Kim Lambden and myself, visited Kenya to negotiate the purchasing of the land and to plan further training courses and to inspect the progress of the work on site.  Hardly any progress had been made from the last visit, which was disappointing and it was obvious that we needed somebody from the Peacemakers’ UK team to be permanently on site to organise, supervise and hire contractors to do the work and also to hire labourers locally on a daily basis.

 You may have seen from our website that Christine retired from her position as Headteacher at Ardeley JMI School at the end of the summer term and on July 9th flew out to Kenya to be that person from the UK team.  She is doing a wonderful job and is finding it very exciting and challenging, moving sometimes into uncharted territories.

Kim Lambden (Healthy Schools Consultant for Barnet & Hackney) visited schools and hospitals while she was there and saw the great need in abandoned and orphaned babies and children.  This is an area we need to bring in more training during the year 2010.

During this visit I met Mugo Karuguti who is the Education Secretary Diocese of Embu and arranged with him for Kim Henderson ( PE Sports Strategy Manager ) to hold a Sports Training Week for Secondary Teachers and pupils, in July.  This took place at two venues during July/August and sports equipment was donated to each school involved from your donations. As always Kim was fantastic and we are planning for a Cultural Festival on site next year.

With Christine being in Kenya indefinitely, it’s now possible for us to have young people in their gap year  and others from the age of 18 upwards, volunteering themselves to work for longer periods in their chosen fields.  Since she has been out there, we have had a trail of young people passing through.  At the end of July Hannah and Charlie stopped over from their world tour and helped plant a vegetable garden, so that we will be able to supply food for the restaurant in the future (yet to be built), thus becoming self sufficient.  In August Rob and Katherine, students on vacation from University, visited Kenya to interview local dignitaries  to get  first hand information about life there, for their dissertations. Now we have 4 gap year students, Fergus, Tom, Sophie and Rachel, who joined Christine on 11th November and will be there for 6 months.  This longer length of stay will enable them to integrate into the community and truly experience life there.  They have already visited schools and orphanages, and laboured on site.  I’m hoping that they will form a drama group with the Kenyan youth and perform a nativity play in the Prayer House at Christmas, inviting the community as the audience.  Dave & Jackie (parents of Sophie) are visiting at Christmas and we hope will be part of the audience.

Before the 4 students left for Kenya, Kim Clark (Social Worker) gave them a basic training on how to handle and stimulate babies and toddlers, who are deprived.  Also how important it is to become a member of a team etc.,

I do think this is a wonderful opportunity for young people to serve and give of themselves in this way, to see what life is like in another community.  It makes them appreciate what they have at home, but more importantly, it’s character forming and life changing.

The Peacemakers’ team will always be changing in personnel as the needs of time are met and new challenges arise. Kim Clark and Kim Lambden have joined the team this year, as Len Little moves on to support the ‘War Heros’ Charity.  Len was responsible and successful in heading up ‘Drugs Awareness’ seminars and DACA rehab groups. Raising funds in giving talks to various groups in the UK.  Many projects were formed amongst the youth of Kenya to provide income for them and also successfully formed a football league.  A few Kenyans are now trained and equipped to extend the training to others in surroundings areas, with the Resource Centre being the Headquarters.

This Christmas, in the newly completed Prayer House, we are giving children orphaned through Aids or Malaria, a party.  If you would like to donate money or a gift suitable for a girl or boy between the ages of 5 - 19, Dave & Jackie will take them across to Kenya when they travel on the 19th December. Thank you.

Despite the difficult financial times we are in, you have overwhelmed us by your love and kindness and your sacrificial giving. On behalf of all those who have been touched by your generosity, may I say A BIG THANK YOU.  You surely will be rewarded by God for your ‘LOVE’, and for going the extra mile in sharing what you have with those who have not.
 

GOD BLESS YOU AND YOUR FAMILY THIS CHRISTMAS AND 

MAY YOU HAVE A PROSPEROUS 2010

Brenda