Wednesday, 27 July 2016

Barbra Kowa


This week I was lucky enough to meet up with Barbra to talk about the work that she does at Kawama School. Barbra is the Senior Teacher, and has ambitions to be a headteacher herself in the future. As senior teacher, Barbra works closely with Mary, the headteacher. Barbra explained to me that as part of her role, she monitors the teachers’ planning books and monitors lessons which she enjoys doing. When Mary isn’t in school, the teachers are happy to talk to Barbra about any issues, knowing that she is always willing to help them. 

Barbra has always lived in the area, being born in Chimwemwe, the next village to Kawama. Like many of our teachers, living in the community means that she understands the many challenges that many people face, and which impacts on the children in class. However, Barbra knows that value of education and makes sure that the children learn to work hard and learn as much as they can while they are at school.

Barbra has not always been a teacher. At one time she started selling second hand clothes. However, her heart has always been in teaching and so she quickly returned to the job she loves. Barbra explained that she started working in a private school, where she learned a lot, but in 2012 moved to Kawama so that she could work with children who were more vulnerable. Barbra said that she particularly enjoys teaching younger children so that she can help to ‘lay foundations in their lives.’


Recently Barbra attended a workshop run by the government on how to incorporate moral, spiritual and health teaching into every lesson. This has inspired her to make sure that as well as teaching the academic subjects, the children are learning how to behave and make good decisions in their lives. Barbra is a role model for the children as she continues to study. She has already completed her Diploma in early Childhood and is panning on taking her ‘O’ level maths next year, as this has recently become a compulsory qualification for all teachers.


As Barbra lives with her sister who has four children, she is always busy but in her spare time she loves to read. Barbra told me that she likes to read Christian books rather than novels and that her favourite author is Benny Hinn.

Barbra is always very busy in school, so I really appreciated her spending time with me talking about her interesting life.







Wednesday, 20 July 2016

From Cranleigh to Kawama - Reflections On A Long-Distance & Long-Lasting Relationship


I wasn't prepared for how Kawama would grab a place in my heart back in 2011 when I first visited in the October of my second year teaching at Cranleigh, nor how hard it would be to say goodbye at the end of Cranleigh's 10th and my 4th - and final - trip, respectively.

I don't consider myself particularly sentimental - places mean far less to me than people - but there is something about Africa that has been in my blood from my own Sixth Form trip to Namibia, now 13 years ago. Flying over the very flat and often brown landscape of sub-Saharan Africa cannot fail to impress upon you a sense of the sheer expanse of space coupled with some promise of unlocked potential. It is a kind of bittersweet emotion (both exciting and frustrating) that I have come to experience during my times in Zambia.

My 2003 Sixth Form trip to Namibia was brilliant: it combined just enough time (5 days) painting a school in Windhoek with a longer period of trekking and R&R to justify the modern description of the expedition as 'voluntourism' - we even made it into the local newspaper for our 'altruistic' efforts. But I couldn't even tell you now the name of the school in Windhoek, nor why it was chosen, let alone what became of the children and staff after our murals faded. We flew in, made a difference to the aesthetics of the school, and moved on to the rest of our '3rd world adventure'. Looking back, I'm not really sure what I learnt from that experience of what life is like for a Namibian, what they are like as people, their hopes and fears, and the similarities (and differences) with my own life. On reflection, the trip was more about dipping our toes into a new and unfamiliar environment and taking some good holiday snaps...

The essence of Beyond Cranleigh is a millions miles away from this experience. At its heart is the understanding that at our core, Cranleighans and those living in Kawama (or whichever community you might be comparing) are the same. We are all born into this world with the same capacity for hopes and dreams, and we are united by a common human nature. It is interesting to see how many of our Cranleigh students get this. I will always remember one student, a certain Cathy Hobbs (who was inspired by her visit in her Lower Sixth to spend 3 months of her Gap Year back working with Beyond Ourselves) saying on her final morning of the school trip that it was simply chance that meant that she had been born into an affluent Surrey family (with all the privilege and opportunity that afforded) and not a family in Kawama... How easily it could have been the other way round. It was a sobering statement, but it reinforced the realisation for me that none of us at Cranleigh has earned a right to privilege. We have all benefitted from opportunities given to us, and to our parents and the generations before them; but others around the world have not had such opportunities. If we enter a community like Kawama and make the mistake of only seeing differences or (which is even worse) passing moral judgment on the situation that people have found themselves in, then we are guilty of a self-righteous arrogance that will never be able to move on from a culture of 'us' and 'them'.

Cranleigh's partnership with Kawama leaves no room for this way of thinking. Over the last 5 years, Kawama Community School has come to be known as Cranleigh's sister school - not in a 'big sister, little sister' way, rather it is more like a twinning. Each has its own infrastructure and culture, but each is made stronger through the partnership. Crucially, the sheer existence of Kawama Community School is the brainchild of the Kawama community itself; it was started by volunteer teachers who lived in the community and saw a need to reach those who were most at risk of not receiving any kind of formal education. These teachers and the community leaders were the visionaries, and the school remains under their leadership and governance. Being invested in a community means that you want it to succeed. Some of these teachers grew up as orphans and had to teach themselves; others will soon have their own children go through the school. Each of them knows the power of education to open doors, to provide opportunities, and to allow for the possibility of individuals to flourish. Isn't that just the same ethos that runs through the veins of Cranleigh?

Over the last 5 years of partnership with Kawama, new classrooms have been built, the church has been renovated, a toilet block with flushing loos has been built, a dedicated kitchen area has been established to feed the children each day at school, and a bore hole to provide fresh water for the local community has been dug. Cranleigh has lent a hand with some of this, but it is certainly not Cranleigh's 'baby'. Have we exhausted our support for Kawama and done what we set out to do? No. Cranleigh committed to a 20 year partnership with Beyond Ourselves to specifically support Kawama Community School, but the 'exit strategy' is as important (if not more so) than the foundations that have been laid so far. The school is flourishing in terms of pupil numbers, the training of its teachers and the quality of education provided (- it is considered a beacon school in the area), but the job is not yet done. Cranleigh has still not managed to make good on its promise to sponsor the 225 children that was agreed at the start of the partnership - 5 years later, we are close but still only at 205. Annual fundraising meets the shortfall, but that is not a sustainable form of financial support. Moreover, what is the long-term goal for Kawama? The pupils get a good primary education there, but what of secondary and tertiary education? What of the dreams that so many of the children have to become doctors, bankers, pilots, policemen and women? How can the children be given the opportunity to realise their potential and gain access to the jobs that could impact their community in a positive way for the future? These are not short-term questions and there are no short-term fixes.

One of the questions I sometimes ask our students (and myself) is why do we keep organising trips to Kawama? £1600 per Cranleigh student is a lot of money, plus we certainly shake up the day-to-day routines a bit when we descend as a group into Kawama. Is it worth it? I still believe it is. On one level, we bring with us English as our mother-tongue, and the opportunities to support the teachers in educating the pupils in English is invaluable. But I believe that we also bring much more with us than that - we are a symbol of hope. Our twice-yearly visits are a reminder to Kawama (and to us) that we are in a committed, long-term, long-distance relationship. We care about what happens in the community and the school and want to see them flourish. Equally, they care about us and enjoy the time spent together as fellow educators and also in friendship. That is something that money cannot buy. And I also believe that what Cranleigh gains in return is invaluable, for we gain a perspective that says that our neighbour can be on the other side of the fence or the other side of the world, but they are still our neighbour.

Written by Miss Laura Sturdee. (Laura has been a teacher at Cranleigh School for several years and has been integral in the development of Beyond Cranleigh. We are sad to see her leave Cranleigh this summer, but are so thankful for all she has contributed over the years and wish her well in her new adventures! No doubt we will see her back in Zambia one day in the not too distant future)

Wednesday, 13 July 2016

Bringing Dignity

It’s time to talk about the lack of access to sanitary products.

About two years ago we became aware that many of the girls who have started their periods weren’t coming to school during that time of the month. I’m ashamed to say that this wasn’t something that had ever crossed my mind before. I’ve been fortunate to always have access to pads since I first started my own period. This is a serious issue around the world, something so basic yet many of us haven’t thought twice about.

I got a bit of a wake up call when we first started talking about this. We started asking questions. We started realising that some girls were missing nearly a quarter of their education because of this. We found out that girls were using old rags, rough cleaning materials, the insides of old discarded mattresses and even tree bark when they had their periods. We heard stories of girls in pain because of using these materials. We saw the shame when they told us stories of when they had risked going to school and were embarrassed because they had leaked through onto their school uniform.

As a team, we felt we needed to address this issue. When you hear that girls are using bark and dirty old mattresses to manage their periods, well, it’s time to do something about that.

To meet the immediate need, we received donations of sanitary pads for the schools, so the girls and teachers would have access to something should they need it at school. But we knew this was a temporary solution and we wanted to meet the need both at school and at home. We did some research and felt we should explore making reusable sanitary pads.

So for the last 18 months or so we’ve been buying different reusable sanitary pads, making our own, testing different materials, testing different designs, getting feedback and then going through the whole process again and again. Earlier this year we finally felt like we’d come up with a good design that works for the girls and women in the communities we work with.

A few weeks ago we met with the older girls and their females carers at each of the schools to introduce the pads. The response was overwhelming. The girls and women were all so grateful that we were talking about this and address this huge issue. As I stood in front of a room full of girls and women in the Kawama community I wondered to what lengths these females have gone to to manage their periods. What good news this is to hear there is another option!

Girls and women ordering pad packs
We have started giving the girls their packs but we will be busy sewing for the next couple of months to fulfil all of the orders. After that we will start to provide these packs for the teachers and then for women in the community. 

A Greater Joy student receiving her pad pack
It costs about £10 for us to make one pack. If cared for properly these pads should last at least two years. 

We’d love your help in providing these for as many girls and women and possible in the communities we work with. We’ve recently put these packs as an alternative gift on our website, please would you consider helping us give this life transforming gift to as many girls and women as possible?

Click here (http://www.beyondourselves.co.uk/donate/alternative-gifts/item/3/53/reusable-sanitary-pad-pack/?a=sl) to visit our website and to buy a pack (or two or three!) for girls and women here in Zambia.

Wednesday, 6 July 2016

12 Months In Africa

Jan and Mike at a very dry Victoria Falls January 2016

Well that went fast! 366 days/12 months/1 year or however you like to put it. Jan and I came out from London UK and arrived in Ndola on 6th June 2015 and have enjoyed every moment of it (OK perhaps not quite every moment) but all of the time working in the schools that Beyond Ourselves partner with.

Jan retired from her job as Head of an inner London primary school and I finished my construction business in the UK at Christmas 2014 and we both spent the next 6 months sorting out our family home ready to rent out to give us an income while working with Beyond Ourselves for an unknown time but probably around 12-18 months in total. (remember that timescale)

Since coming out here we have got to meet some fantastic people who we can now call our friends. Beyond Ourselves Zambia has a really great team of people, but to us they are more like an extended family as it is not just Dan, Melissa and Emily but their families and many other friends in the Ndola area that we have met through them.

What have we been up to? Well to start Jan has been working with the teachers but more often with the Heads of the schools to offer assistance and advice, enabling the schools to continue to develop their teaching skills.

Working with the children in early years

Jan working closely with Mary, Head Teacher at Kawama School
I started off working on “construction” type projects such as the borehole and toilets at Kawama but that progressed into spending a lot more time assisting Dan and Melissa with more general things to do with the admin, finance and specific early organisation of different projects they are working on. Both of us can often be found in other schools and organisations in the area assisting with various activities.

Mike playing an "alternative role" at another Ndola school

When not working with Beyond Ourselves we can often be found “on the road” or “off the beaten track in the bush” in our trusty “Off road camper” in one of Zambia’s National Parks or perhaps a little further afield in one of the neighbouring countries photographing the amazing wildlife that the area has to offer.

On holiday with our family in The Makgadikgadi Pans, Botswana, at Christmas 2015
Mike enjoying what he likes best, getting down and close photographing
a Puff Adder here at our home in Ndola with Jan filming him
The highlight of our time here has to be the people; whether it is the children in the schools enjoying learning and seeing the fantastic smiles as they discover something new or perhaps the teachers putting into practice the training that they are being given. We have also enjoyed getting to know the children on the farm where we live. They are an extremely poor community but by talking, playing and sometimes buying a small present of a lollipop or sweet each or a ball from the local shop we watch their faces light up.
Of course the community and friends we have made here are also a fantastic bonus. The “Ex-Pat” community has a great wealth of knowledge and welcomed us immediately so we have made many new friends.

Lowlights…. Well sadly it is only one I think for both of us and that is dealing with the often extremely slow and inefficient bureaucracy of the Zambian system. We have both had enough of that but we do now have work permits, a Zambian registered car and Zambian Driving Licences.

Now earlier I mentioned the timescale. Yes we have family at home and they are a great part of our life so we would not want to be away forever. A short while back Jodie and Dan asked Jan and I if we would consider staying on and helping a little longer until September 2017. After chatting with our children back in the UK we have agreed and with immense joy we look forward to working with the whole team at Beyond Ourselves and with all of our friends, both in the schools and in the Copperbelt area for some time yet.