Orthodox Mission
The Saint Nektarios Education Fund partners with local communities in African nations to provide education to children in remote villages.The Saint Nektarios Education fund seeks to impact five pillars that contribute to education. These include: Facilities, Clean Water & Power, Sanitation, Disease Prevention, and Sustainability. To the extent that our fund can assist in positively impacting these pillars, the likelihood for successful education is increased. All efforts are designed to empower local communities through the utilization of local resources in addressing these pillars.
Facilities and Classrooms
According to local needs and the Ugandan government’s focus on STEM
education (science, technology, engineering, and math), the fund has
built science and computer labs as well as traditional classrooms. Many
students must travel long distances to attend school, requiring boys’
and girl’s dormitories, teachers’ quarters, and kitchen and shower
facilities. At Holy Archangel Michael schools, the inclusion of
recreational grounds on campus allowed students to compete in and
advance to the semi-finals of the first Coca Cola Regional Football
Competitions, increasing the visibility of the school in the community.
Board member Dr. Bill White noted that by raising money “for an actual
structure, a building, a lab, a cafeteria, and a dormitory, we knew
tangibly that our money was going to exactly a place where we can follow
it, watch it, and we can see the results.”
Clean Water and Power
In order to function, a school community needs working wells, rain
filtration, and a reliable power system. The construction of our newest
school, Saint Sophia Secondary School in Butembe, Uganda, showed us the
critical importance of access to safe water not only for a school but
for the entire surrounding community. Although Saint Sophia is on the
shores of Lake Victoria, one of the largest fresh water lakes in the
world, the water is not drinkable, so the school was constructed with an
additional aim to promote safe water for the community and to become a
model school. In partnership with the International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC)
and their Saint Photini water initiative, we completed not only a
school building in 2015 but also a solar-powered fresh water filtration
and storage system, as well as sanitary facilities through a roof waters
harvesting system designed by IOCC.
Sanitation
Proper sanitation is paramount for the health and well-being of the
children attending Saint Nektarios sponsored schools. Sanitation
projects are designed to construct the physical structures while working
hand in hand with fund’s disease prevention efforts to improve the
opportunities for our children to attend school. In the past the
construction of toilet and latrine blocks was part of our overall school
project strategies. A transition is being made to drainable toilets
designed to accommodate both male and female students. This design
change creates a more sustainable method of addressing the sanitation
needs of our schools now and into the future as enrollment increases.
Disease Prevention
Diarrheal diseases kill close to 2 million children worldwide every
year. Students attending our schools may milk cows in the morning, care
for sick and injured family members, wash soiled linens, and then play
in the dirt all before eating lunch. These activities can spread
bacteria and viruses easily. Hand washing and disease prevention
awareness is the most effective and cost efficient way to prevent these
unnecessary illnesses and death.
Through the formal implementation of a Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene initiative (WASH) we can prevent diseases among the school children and greatly influence the quality of education they receive. These hygiene habits not only have a positive effect on the children themselves, but those they share it with in their communities. The WASH initiative provides a vertical transfer of disease prevention through education and behavioral change that if entrenched as a habit will be sustained for generations. Vaccines can only prevent disease transfer in the current generation.
Through the formal implementation of a Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene initiative (WASH) we can prevent diseases among the school children and greatly influence the quality of education they receive. These hygiene habits not only have a positive effect on the children themselves, but those they share it with in their communities. The WASH initiative provides a vertical transfer of disease prevention through education and behavioral change that if entrenched as a habit will be sustained for generations. Vaccines can only prevent disease transfer in the current generation.
In Gulu, Uganda, the community donated the land for the school. In Lwemiyaga, a member of parliament donated bricks and secured the land for school construction. He personally contributed a power station, a laboratory, and a computer section, while International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) provided the girls’ dormitory and two additional high school classes. Our newest school began construction in 2014 with a donation of land and bricks from the people.
As board president Fr. Evan Armatas says, “There is no sense among the local people that this is some project being built by a group overseas and that they have nothing invested in it. This is their school, their project—it’s their community school.”
http://ampelonas-trygetes.blogspot.gr/2016/10/saint-nektarios-education-fund-seeks-to.html
http://stnektariosfund.org/golf/
St. Nektarios the Wonderworker, Bishop of Pentapolis (Libya)
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου