News
Christmas appeal - 07/12/2009 10:38
Please take a moment to read this post. Just give me a couple of minutes to tell you about Imani, Zarif and Aasir in the photo below. Taken before Christmas last year, they are smiling and waving. Not so long ago, it was a different story. Before they came to the Jubilee Blind School, Northern Kenya, they were left to their own devices, with little care and attention and definitely no prospect of an education. I do not blame their families for neglecting them, because I do not know what it is like to live in a harsh desert environment, where the men are gone for weeks at a time with the camel herds in search of grazing and water. I do not know what it is like to have a child who cannot see. A child who needs constant care the I cannot provide, because making sure that my What I do know is that the Jubilee Blind School is a life-line to so many children. Children like Maluum, who arrived after fleeing terrible clashes between the Boran and Gabbra tribes, resulting in widespread loss of life. Deeply traumatised and speaking only Borana, she could not communicate with anyone. After six months her life had been transformed. She is now self-assured, able to converse in Swahili and hold her own in the daily bustle of school life. She has learnt Braille, is forging ahead with her studies and is fully integrated in the school community. There are many children like Maluum in need of support and a future. Children like Little Richard, who suffered at the hands of the Lords Resistance Army, and is orphaned and looking after his younger siblings in Patongo refugee camp in norther Uganda. A lovely boy, who, in spite of overwhelming responsibility at such They are awe-inspiring. Each and every one of them. You may not have had a chance to support our work this year. Why not grasp this opportunity to give this Christmas? Will you help us achieve our target of raising £30,000 so that we can fulfil our promises to the children? Promises such as providing more places at the Jubilee Blind school, preventing children from being trafficked in Nepal and offering vocational training to former child soldiers in northern Uganda. Together we can bring a smile to more young faces. Together we can offer them a future. Together we can make a difference. We cannot do it without you. Imagine, just £12 could buy a set of books for one classroom. £35 could pay for a year of schooling for a child in Haiti. £50 could provide one former child soldier witha vocational training course in carpentry. £500 could pay Thank you for reading. And thank you for your support. With all good wishes for a very happy Christmas, from all of us at Jubilee Action. Warm regards, John Graham Chairman...
Hello from Haiti - 02/12/2009 17:14
Dear all, It seems like a moment ago I was in Uganda and barely touched down in the UK before I was off to Haiti, and I have to say I am pretty exhausted, but it's been an unforgettable week. I'm sitting in a nice hotel with air conditioning, fresh I am here to investigate the Restavek situation of child slaves in homes and the dangers that street children face every day of their young lives. For the first part of the week I was based in Cap-Haitien in the rural north and then here in Port au Prince to First port of call was our partners Carwyn and Reninca Hill, who have been working with disabled children in our House of Blessing in Cap-Haitien. They are doing a fantastic job of transforming people's prejudice towards disabled children. The children are loved, the parents educated and lives are being transformed Carwyn organised meetings for me with the city's leading authorities on children. My mind is so full of information! I have met with the only children's judge in Cap-Haitien (and that's where juvenile justice starts and ends), community leaders, the government directors of social affairs (that was a joke, as It is a situation so dire that many times I wondered if we could ever make a difference. People are so hungry and poor there that they make "cookies" out of mud and sell them as food! The government is so corrupt and disorganised that trying to get them to I met with the directors of international organisations working in Port au Prince (the capital) yesterday and heard about their work. They are excited about the possibility of us working here and are willing to support us on the Restavek issue, which is amazing. With their support and experience we So, I leave Port au Prince now with the intention of returning soon and for Jubilee Action to make a difference to the many children I have met and seen this week. How lucky we are to live in an organised, educated civil society with so much wealth. One thing Bye for now, Caroline...



