Another busy season behind us now and a big thank you to everyone who visited the schools, sponsored a child, donated to our projects, spread the word, we could not do it without you.
We have several new schools we are now working with, more about them soon but just wanted to talk a bit about the two schools we have now finished our work with. The first is the Arabic School in Brikama. It was one of our very first projects and we intended building a new school for them and at last it is finished. It took longer than we hoped as we started it in our early days and we did not have as much support as we do now. They now have a fine classroom block, four classrooms, two offices, 3 toilets and a big store all completely finished now. They had some support from another organisation last year and have now almost completed two further classroom blocks. We have left plenty of school materials there, footballs, football kit etc and wish them every success in the future.
At Basori Nursery School we are very proud to have completed fenced the school, provided toilets and a big store cupboard full of teaching materials, toys, mats etc. We had planned to continue to work with this school by providing teachers’ salaries but after discussion with the school committee it was agreed that we would leave the school in the hands of the committee to develop further. Unfortunately they did not want to keep the two teachers that we had employed but I am happy to say that we have now placed both of them at new schools and very happy they are too! We have had a wonderful time at Basori and I know many people have very fond memories of their visits there, we shall miss them but leave knowing that the school is in a better condition than when we found it. We wish them every success for the future too.
On to our new projects. The first school is Santosu Nursery, in Brikama. It is a very well organised school with dedicated staff but they were lacking in many items to enable the staff to teach the children as well as they wanted to. We have had several visits there with visitors and have been given a very warm welcome by staff children, parents and committee members. They have received many items and now boast a much healthier looking store cupboard. Three members of staff have been at the school since it was built in 1996 and they relied on volunteers to come on to help with the classes. We are happy to announce that Mr Camara, originally from Basori is now a full time member of staff there and is about to start his three year course at The Gambia College studying Early Childhood Development. We have also provided salary to another new member of staff, Abdoulie Sarr, who is about to start his third year at The Gambia College. Now the four classes each have a qualified (or studying to be) teacher and the Head teacher, Alkali Cham is free to run the school and oversee the teaching methods and staff. They have very quickly formed themselves into a very tight knit and happy group of staff, it is a pleasure to see them all working so well together. We have also provided an allowance to increase the salary of the other two teachers and hope to get more sponsors so we can cover the monthly salary payments for the school which will enable them to use the small amount they get from school fees for developing the school, paying for the water etc. During the Easter holidays we laid new floors in every classroom plus the office, they were in a very poor condition before. Our plan for next season is to put a new roof on the school building. It has been there since it was built and is now in a very state of repair. Already the rainy season winds have lifted some of the corrugate so with the holes already there it will be very uncomfortable there when it rains. It is a very big building and will need 20packets of corrugate at 1400 dalasis ( just over £30) each to replace the whole roof, plus the nails, a few timbers that need replacing plus the labour I estimate it will cost just over £700 to do. We look forward to more visits there next season.
Our second school is Kitty Arabic School. Kitty is a village just outside of Brikama. The children at this school start from Nursery to grade 8 so the age range is from 3 to about 16. Once again we have had visitors at the end of the season and Kitty also has a very enthusiastic way of welcoming visitors! This school has had no support over the years and were desperate for very basic supplies. They had no pens, pencils or paper for their exams earlier this year which was when we first got involved. We have now provided them with more of the same plus exercise books, chalk, posters, worksheets, sport equipment. We also worked with the charity Inking About Africa http://www.inkingaboutafrica.com/ (please have a look at their website and see if you can help by donating used ink cartridges) and with a donation from Stowmarket Lions Club we have provided much needed benches and tables for four classrooms. With donations from visitors we have put a new roof and timbers on one of the classroom blocks and new windows and shutters on the same block. This is the block where much of the new furniture has been placed. Our next project there is to put a new roof on the other classroom block and window shutters, then we want to build a new classroom block for the nursery and primary one so that the other classes can be used to go up to grade 9 which is an examination year which will mean students are not transferring to Brikama for their last year. There is a lot to do there and I can imagine we will be working there for some time. They are also in constant need of school stationery and resources.
The third school we are planning to work with is a nursery at Kuloro, which is passed Brikama and Madina Ba. We have only recently visited there when Ebrima Njie, the former Headteacher at Basori took over there. The school has been in existence for many years and used to be a busy well attended school. It was formerly funded by CCF, a large charity working in The Gambia and many other countries. They provided the buildings and ran the school for some time before switching their priorities to children with disabilities. The school has gradually seen a decrease in the students attending and consequently a drop in fees being paid so the staffs have been working for a long time without salaries. I met with the teachers and school committee and they are delighted to have Mr Njie and GOAL For The Gambia on board. We were able to provide a few school materials for them but our stocks were very low as it is the end of the season and almost everything had been distributed. However, they were very grateful for the items we did donate and we will endeavour to provide them with much more when school opens again in September. The village have already held meetings to discuss developments and the parents have committed to returning their children to the school and supporting the teachers as best they can. We have agreed to pay one of the teachers as well as Mr Njie and hope we will be able to offer salaries to other teachers before too long.
We have two other schools we are working with in a smaller way. One is St Francis School near to Sanyang. It is a huge Christian School and many of our Scouts attend there. It has a nursery, lower basic, upper basic and senior secondary school on campus. As with all our schools it is in a very poor community and we have promised to try and help them with resources and already sponsor about 15 students there. We have had two visits there and they were both very enjoyable, we also paid another visit to donate more materials, books, encyclopaedias, craft materials which were very well received.
The other school is in Somita which is further upcountry in the Fone area. Another Arabic School with very little in the way of resources. We have donated pens, pencils, exercise books, footballs, blackboard paint and other items but have yet to take visitors there. We hope to do so next season.
The village of Somita is actually the village where my husband and his family come from, hence my interest there and his family have very generously offered us a very large piece of land in a very good position to build our own nursery if we wish to. We will give this some every serious thought over the coming months as the village is definitely in need of one and it would be nice to have our own nursery with staff selected by us and run as we see best. I will discuss the idea with the Dept of Education and see if they agree there is a need before we go any further. The journey to Somita will take about one and a half hours from the tourist area and I hope some visitors will be interested in visiting next season. It is a very different environment further up country and in my opinion very beautiful too.
You may wonder whether we are taking on too much. After discussing this with other trustees and supporters we agreed that it would be better for the charity and reach more children if we took on more projects. We were very busy last season and at one point we were visiting Basori nursery almost every day. This is not good for the children or the community as there is a risk that the community will become dependent on the charity and this would not be good for the schools long term future. Visitors are very generous with the items they bring along for the schools and we believe it best shared amongst needy schools.
The scouts continue to improve and grow in numbers. Janko, the scout leader has worked very hard with the young people; he held a training camp during the Easter holidays, part funded by us. Here he trained many more boys and girls for the band, teaching them to play the musical instruments and also doing drill training. The camp was very successful and the future of the Scout band has never looked brighter. Many of the Scouts join the police and Army bands when they are old enough and this of course is very good for the reputation of Sanyang Scout Troop but not so good for the Scout band! Most of the members who leave to join the police and Army return during their leave and assist Janko with the training. Earlier this year Sanyang Scouts were awarded a trophy by the National Scout Association as best organised Scout Troop and Band. We have taken a few people to visit the Scouts and all have been very impressed at the dedication and professionalism they show.
Two visitors were so impressed with Janko and his leadership skills and also very sympathetic to his search for employment. He is well educated and has done a number of courses since leaving school but finds it hard to get employment; sometimes it is not what you know but who you know! However we are delighted that these visitors have offered to pay a salary to Janko every month to work for the charity. He has already proved himself to be invaluable and with him and Fansu making up the team here I feel we can achieve much more.
The sponsorship scheme is also doing very well with 102 sponsored students at various different levels of education starting from Nursery up to University as well as some in Skills Training. Roughly half of these students have direct sponsors and the rest have their fees paid from charity funds. Some supporters pay a little over the odds for “their” sponsored students and this then goes onto the fund for paying all the school fees in September. It seems to work well this way but we are always looking for new sponsors, either for new students or our existing ones.
We had three First Aid Training Days in December provided by First Aid For Gambia http://www.firstaid4gambia.org/ ,at Basori ( their second year running), Brikama Arabic School and the Sanyang Scouts also were given the opportunity. The days were really valued by the participants and on more than one occasion I have visited a school to find them putting their First Aid skills into practise. First Aid for Gambia provide a large first aid kit for each school and return annually to check on the contents, accident book and replenish stock. We also do our best to keep the boxes stocked up and visitors often bring us First Aid items which is really useful A big thank you to First Aid For Gambia for their support, we hope to see them again this year and maybe even arrange training at some of our new projects.
Once again thank you to everyone who has supported us this year, please keep spreading the word, check our Facebook page for updates https://www.facebook.com/pages/Goal-For-The-Gambia/181077235260338 , our website will be updated very soon and we hope to see you all in The Gambia again next season.
Best Wishes to you all
Sandy Sanyang
GOAL For The Gambia – Trustee and Founder