We work to inspire profound change in the systems and processes that surround us: we empower people to tackle the challenges of the 21st century. We believe it is individuals and communities learning and acting together that releases untapped potential to make the most of our resources: people and the planet. We work across society, across sectors and across continents to deliver action-based learning programmes that are transformational for everyone involved.
Friday, 20 March 2009
Day 5: Friday, 20th March…the last day!
Day 4: Thursday, 19th March
Day 3: Wednesday, 18th March
Wednesday, 18 March 2009
Day 2: Tuesday, 17th March - an introduction to Kawempe...
"True kindness comes from knowing what it feels like to be without." Ghandi
If Day 1 served as an introduction to Kawempe, day 2 really brought home the reality of care in the community and capacity building in practice. Heartbreaking, awe-inspiring, frustrating - it's hard to put the experience into words. Seeing - in reality - the images that have haunted TV screens in the UK and hearing impossible stories that you couldn't make up made us all take a step back and re-evaluate issues of humanity. The dignity with which the clients talked about their experiences and welcomed us into their homes amazed us all. Something that couldn't be doubted is the real impact Kawempe Home Care has made to these people's lives - their support - physically, emotionally and medically - has given new life to these people. And yes, there's a long way to go, but the impact to date is unquestionable.
Joyce - Joyce deserves a whole paragraph dedicated to her in this blog. What an incredible, loving woman. A woman who has used her own experiences of being HIV positive to turn around the lives of other sufferers in her community. A woman who has turned her home into a clinic to support her neighbours and her neighbours' neighbours. A woman who will work for Kawempe Home Care until she dies - a true inspiration.
Following our community visit we returned to Kawempe to work on our project plan, brainstorming options for developing a sustainable income stream for Kawempe through their Beads for Education programme. Simultaneously we developed and implemented our first communications workshop to help upskill the volunteers and clients. 23 people attended the workshop and although they were reluctant to answer questions and join in at the start, they warmed to our method of knowledge sharing by the end and the initial feedback was really positive!
So at the end of day 2 we sit down and reflect - reflect on today, reflect on tomorrow and reflect on how these experiences will stay with us and hopefully inform our behaviours. As we hope to make an impact on their lives, they are already making an impact on ours.
Day 1: Monday, 16th March - Barclays team arrive
Emily, Project Leader, sets the scene...
It is hard to begin to explain the experience of working out in Uganda on behalf of The Great Generation. I have never seen such an industrious, innovative and enterprising response to hardship and poverty. Uganda embodies The Great Generation. This is a country full of entrepreneurs and people who refuse to give up.
We have been working with a number of Community Based Organisations (CBOs) - whom we call our Expert Partners - most of which have developed holistic responses to the spread and impact of HIV Aids. While Uganda has been successfully working towards reducing HIV Aids rates on a national scale, there still exists a regional variation which sees some lake side settlements with rates still as high as 35%. The work to join sectors in the fight against disease and poverty is ongoing.
Our partner organisations are all run by individual community leaders who want to give back, who refuse to walk away from the problems that exist in their communities. They battle with faulty infrastructure on a daily basis to achieve their mission. One of our partners has managed to set up delivery of free anti retroviral treatment to all members of their community who are HIV positive. This has involved continual work, continual pushing, lobbying. The drugs arrive and people refuse to take them because they cannot guarantee their next meal. There are numerous factors which trap people into the cycle of poverty and disease, but for our community partners this will not deter their delivery, and the team will continue to fight on all levels, bringing dignity, prosperity and health to the people of Uganda. We have much to learn from their approach.
We are proud to be working in Uganda, building the capacity of Expert Partners and their community activities. This is an opportunity to share our knowledge, experience and goodwill, and join the battle against hardship on all levels. We have far to go before the Millennium Development Goals are achieved, but one thing is for sure, we need to work together to get there, listening to the real need that exist at a community level, and responding with appropriate, locally defined solutions.
Tuesday, 17 March 2009
Volunteers arrive...
"Volunteers have arrived and are happy. We had lunch and did some sightseeing in Kampala, then a very early night for them. They raised c. £900 for KHC which is amazing! They want to choose how this is invested during the week as part of the infrastructure investment, and as KHS outlined a printer/scanner/photocopier as being a priority, they would like the investment to go towards that. They have also sourced 5 laptops, stationary and 50 Manchester United shirts!
First day tomorrow..." Emily, Project Leader
Monday, 16 March 2009
Emily, Project Leader for TGG, arrives in Kampala...
On Friday, 13th March, we're waiting to hear from Emily - who's just arrived in Kampala, Uganda and will be spending the next week overseeing a pilot capacity building project alongside a group of 4 top Barclay graduates who will be volunteering their marketing skills to help drive an HIV/Aids Outreach and Home-Care Initiative. Emily arrived earlier in the week and has been busy working with the expert partner to ensure that when the volunteers arrive on Sunday all runs according to plan.
Emily phones at 10:15am...to give an update - she's in a remote place called Ginga, 18kms from Kampala, the country's capital. It's the epicenter of HIV Aids - she says 'a harrowing reality'. She's spent the last few days uncovering where the needs are, creating a long-term vision for partnership in Uganda to help with the crisis and waits to see how, once the volunteers arrive on Sunday, the project will work to empower, train - and create an infrastructure for fulfilling the needs of the community.
Stay posted for more of the latest news...