Monday, August 23, 2010

Beberavi orders for CTC L.I.F.E bags

Economic project is proceeding well as Malaika mums are working harder for a tender of 1000 bags from Siamanda Chege who has a company by the name Beberavi collections. This company employs 100 women from rural villages in Kenya, devasted by the HIV/ AIDs virus and high unemployment. (http://www.beberavi.com/)
Siamanda visited CTC Kenya offices where our Malaika mums work and after realizing the good work that CTC does for these ladies, she felt a need of working with them in a way that will help the ladies to earn something for their living.

Malaika mums have also been doing more practicing on dresses and shorts making and this is really helping them to be more perfect.

By Liz Josiah








































































Tuesday, August 17, 2010

We are back!

It has been a quiet time on the blog but not on the ground. The last couple of months have been very busy and we have witnessed tremendous growth in all of our programs.
Starting with our Malaika kids Program which has seen some new children come in, while some of our children who has been in the centre has moved on to regular schools after performing so well. Go Malaika kids!! We love you so much.
On the Health initiative, we finally have opened a clinic. Such a blessing! We started officially at the beginning of this month of August and the community has now started to enjoy the testing and counseling services right at our centre. We can’t wait to be able to offer complete Health services, but one step at a time. This program has not only seen the clinic open, but we have 3 new employees to CTC to help run the program. Welcome to the CTC family guys.

On the Education initiative, Rafiki Link has not been left behind. We have a new employee to help out with this growing program that has unlimited potential to help our students. Welcome

The environment program is enjoying a boost from Albion heights school in Canada, with our Initiative to make Ngeya a beautiful school for the kids to learn and enjoy now the botanical garden is looking very beautiful. Thanks Albion heights and Anita specifically for all the efforts to keep the partnership going.

Mama hope has helped us push our gardens to the next level. We have started a tree nursery and hope to run three gardens in the near future. Thanks Mama hope, there is true hope in the lives of our community through your support.

The economy program received tons of blessings beginning with Cucu Alice and the visit of the ASG team that has seen the mums with brand new energy to keep sewing. Please keep those bag orders coming.

I want to thank all of you who have had an opportunity to visit us this summer. It has been a joy to host all of you and thanks for your input in what we are doing in Maai Mahiu. We request you to remain connected and check us out often as we have opportunities with your name written all over them. Bring those gifts and talents as we need them.

Welcome back and stay updated.

Jeremiah Kuria










Saturday, August 7, 2010

Faith and Community: Ubuntu Day

Two Saturday’s ago, our team were witnesses to the strength of the human spirit and the power of community. For the first time in Maai Mahiu the five major tribes of this village came together to celebrate Unity in Diversity. Nearly 1000 Maasai, Turkana, Kamba, Luo, and Kikuyu people came to dance and sing and be witnesses to how important standing together as a community is for the future of Kenya.

For the past year CTC has sponsored an Ubuntu Day once a month. Ubuntu is a Zulu word that translates, "I am because we are." CTC was able to bring these groups together because of long-term cultivated relationships. One person and family at a time. There were no handouts at this gathering, no empty aid with strings attached, no free rides; simply a promise from CTC to walk with the people and to seek solutions to their struggles in relationship, together.

The day began with the Environmental Club from Ngea Primary along with children from other local schools planting trees along the highway that runs through Maai Mahiu. What followed was a day of dancing, singing, laughter and fun.

The new Art, Culture, and Peace Center at CTC was officially dedicated by the tribal groups, an amazing goat stew was prepared by the ShoSho’s (grandmothers), and all was supported by Jeremiah, Rocky, Bernard, and the whole CTC staff. They did an amazing job.

The day ended with a football (soccer) tournament between teams from CTC/Maai Mahiu, Maasai, and IDP (Internally Displaced Persons). 100’s of people, mostly kids, circled the field to watch the side take a run at each other. As the sun was setting and a storm was moving into the valley, on the eighth penalty kick CTC defeated IDP 2-1. The World Cup final had nothing on this “beautiful game.”

As dusk was turning to dark, the kids gathered and asked Jeremiah to bless them with words as they had blessed us. A Beautiful Day concluded with the Beautiful Game. If there is a better way to embody Ubuntu, I don’t know what it is.

“I am because we are!”

peace,

Ken

Note: The Faith and Community team has completed its trip to Kenya. This journal entry and the ones to follow document a piece of our experience.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Faith and Community: Initiation

There is a moment in every journey where expectations, anticipation, and excitement come face to face with a new reality, a new place, a new culture. Our team host Charles Wachira introduced us step by step into the world of Maai Mahiu and the work CTC is engaged in.

But, there is a moment when the joys and struggles of the people become incarnate in relationship. For many members of our team that moment came at standing in a demonstration garden at Ngea Primary School. Ngea is a public school with about 1000 students and 10 teachers.

The garden which is used by CTC to teach the kids in the Environmental Club how to plant and raise vegetables to help feed their families, sits on the corner of the school campus, bordered on one side by the school’s kitchen (basically s storage building with an open pit fire in one corner) and on the other by an orphanage.

Charles was explaining how the school serves a hot lunch to the kids whose families can afford to pay 50 Kenyan shillings per term (less than 1 US dollar) and it is the only meal most of them get a day. “Does everyone eat?” “No,” said Charles, “Only about half of them.” After a long silence when we were all trying to process what he just said, Charles told us the story of his own struggle to find money to finish 8th grade and then later secondary school. The sacrifices his mother made was the only reason he was standing there with us. He now spends all his extra money making sure his siblings, not to mention children he does not even know, stay in school. “Education is everything. It will make the biggest difference.” After a long pause he finished, “I love my mother very much.”

It is easy to be overwhelmed by the intensity of the need. Everywhere one looks, there is need.

But still, in Charles’ story (and many others we would hear), there is hope.
Education begins with one person trying to make a difference, and finds its completion in a community transformed.

This Friday, Charles will turn in the final chapter of his Masters Thesis. The transformation continues.

Peace,
Ken

Note: The Faith and Community team has completed its trip to Kenya. This journal entry and the ones to follow document a piece of our experience.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Faith and Community: Separation

Adventures come in all shapes and forms. Some are grand and epic, about which books are written and tales told. Others happen in the imagination of a child and only require space to play and to dream. But, no matter what kind of adventure, the common element is separation. Separation from the normal, everyday, run-of-the-mill happenings of life, and diving into a new reality is how all adventures begin.

The journey began for our Faith and Community team back in November 2009. Several of us with connections to CTC gathered at Mozart’s Coffee Shop in Austin, Texas to talk about coming together as a team to travel to Kenya and experience for ourselves what Zane had been telling us about for years.

At that first meeting we decided we did not want to focus on a particular project or element of CTC, we wanted to focus on relationship. A common belief that all people are created in the image of God drew us together, and a common experience of the power of community brought us to Kenya. Relationship.

Money was raised (easier than most people think), bags packed, tears shed, and 24 plane-airport-taxi hours later we were in Nairobi!

The excitement of our arrival temporarily overcame any notion of jetlag (an 8 hour time difference). As I drifted in and out of sleep that first night, I was startled awake by the sound of two monkeys arguing (how can you tell?) in a tree outside my window. Yep, we are in Kenya!

The next morning we headed north out of the city toward the town of Maai Mahiu. As the road swung to the right on the edge of the Rift Escarpment the whole beautiful, amazing, Rift Valley opened before us. Its scale defies description. Beth, Sandy, Sam, Judy, Lysle, Emily, I let out a collective, “Wow.” Definitely a new reality! Separation.

Peace,

Ken

Note: The Faith and Community team has completed its trip to Kenya. This journal entry and the ones to follow document a piece of our experience.