Dear Friends,
There is an African expression that refers to responsibility for one’s younger siblings, “I’m carrying them all on my back.” This captures an important aspect of the AFRICAN CULTURE: the close kinship ties within families. It has been demonstrated that the first child to leave school and find work will strive to put his or her younger siblings through school. It is these strong kinship ties that make our dollars go further! Their love leverages our dollars; our dollars leverage their love. When we become Providers in the Village that Raises a Child, it is a truly equal partnership!
Welcome to “The Village,” our “Village of Love Canada” newsletter, sharing news and needs from the “Village of Love” in Kenya. The theme of this month’s newsletter is Productive Partnership: making your dollars go further!
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Once a year, the Rideau Canal in Ottawa freezes over, and skaters seize the moment! On Sunday, February 5, 2012, some of these skaters will be skating with a purpose: to raise funds to fight AIDS in Africa. They will be participating in the annual IceCAP/AIDS, organised by our partners, CAP/AIDS Network.
One adventurous soul, John Rossall, will be going from Toronto to Ottawa to skate for the “Village of Love Canada.” Way to go, John! Please consider sponsoring John by going on line to make a pledge: click HERE. And of course, if you find the urge is irresistable to go on a glorious escapade down a frozen canal, contact claire@capaids and join the “Village of Love” team!
Our greatest need is for sustainable funds, to build the capacity of the Kenyan “Village of Love” organisation.
With your year-end tax deductible gift, AIDS-orphaned children will have a chance at life!
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Growing up in a very poor family, Leonora and her younger siblings could not go to school. Through Leonora’s resourcefulness and ingenuity this changed!
She was eleven years old when her mother sent her to market to buy some vegetables. Leonora bought some bananas instead, set up her own stall, and sold the bananas at a profit. She bought the vegetables, gave her mother the profits and taught her mother how to do the same. Their family banana stall enabled all the children in the family to go to school!
Although Leonora longed to be a teacher, there was no money for Teacher’s Training College. Instead she volunteered her time, teaching at a school run by a Dutch foundation. A woman from the foundation noticed Leonora’s gentle care for the poverty stricken children attending the school,and suggested that Leonora become a social worker, encouraging her to apply to that foundation for a scholarship.
Leonora took her advice. The rest is history. On graduating, she put her nine younger siblings through university. It has always been her joy and mission in life to see that children receive an education, including the fifteen she and Andrew have raised!
Now she advocates for the children in “Village of Love,” that they too may receive an education.