I am aware many people have enjoyed reading the journey of Lorraine Machingura, one of our Zimbabwean teachers at One Way Pre School. Before I write anything else I would like to pass on her thanks to all who donate because her education is paid for by you wonderful people!
I wanted to write this blog as I wanted to inform you all about Lorraine’s next venture that she wants to achieve. To remind you all, Lorraine grew up in a rural area of Zimbabwe called Zvimba which is around 2 hours drive from Harare. She lived with her grandmother from a young age due to the death of both her parents before turning 12 years old.
The following is what Lorraine has written for us to share:
Life was not easy for us because me and my sister did not have birth certificates and my grandmother was not working, so for her to pay for food for the family and school fees was a great difficulty. In my Grandmothers family there were 6 with 4 passing away and one left who is HIV positive and me so we all grew up with a big struggle to pay for school fees. In the holiday’s when others would play I would work to get fees for next term.
Growing up in this situation made me strong and I understood the lives of orphans and the less privileged so I feel I really want to help others as much as I can. Especially the kids, just to give them love or that motherly care that most guardians can’t give for different reasons. I love children and it’s my passion, they give me joy and peace in my heart and I’d love to see them achieving some things in their life they would not otherwise achieve.
It is my dream to see kids who are orphans getting the sense of family again when they will be thinking that there will be no one to turn to. I understand their relatives will be there but they will always be full of their own problems and some of them can be abusive to the ones left behind.
Please, I am appealing to you to support me with my dream of opening an orphanage in Isaroi district a few hours out of Harare. I chose this area because there are a few orphanages in the city of Harare but there are few in this area so therefore there are many children in need of real help and assistance. Also most of the people in this area don’t see the importance of letting the children go to school. It is not seen as a priority for these orphans to go to school. My intention is to buy the land and build the orphanage in the name of my four daughters so I can leave them with something so they can have an easier life than I had. I want them to have no barriers to what they can achieve and to grow up to help those less fortunate.
I want to thank-you for reading my dream and I thank you in advance for your support and prayers. Without the help of all of you my education would not have happened and I would never have dreamt so big because I only live in a small wooden house where the only place for my kids to sit or play is their bed. As you can imagine this gets even more difficult when the rains come.
May God Bless whatever you are doing now in Jesus’ name! Amen!
I hope you enjoyed Lorraine’s dream but to make this dream a reality she needs money, clothes, blankets, books, toys and school resources. The land needs buying and the orphanage needs building but she really believes that this will happen one day and I bet there are people reading this who would love to help her and her family in some way. If you would like to help her you can donate financially through PayPal and just mark it as ‘for the orphanage’ and we will save them for her. If you would like to donate goods then please do so and hopefully we can bring them back with us in September or ship them out. Please e.mail us for more information if you can.
Nearly a whole year ago we were driving to Heathrow airport to fly to Zimbabwe and I asked Sue if she would worry about us when we were away. After allying our fears that she wouldn’t worry she merely said with a hint of jealousy in her tone; “I just wish I was going on such an exciting adventure”
Zimbabwe really has been the adventure we’d have hoped for and we’ve had some amazing times and we’ve got so many memories but Friday the 19th July 2013 will be a day I think neither of us will ever forget. We had the pleasure of visiting Hatcliffe, a large high density suburb of Harare where approximately 40,000 people live with a lack of running water, plumbing and no electricity supply. It’s Africa that we see on the TV! Comic Relief style Africa..
A brief history of Hatcliffe is an area where the government moved its poorest people to, throwing them off their land and away from the city. It’s an area I believe is forgotten about about and an area that is largely ignored. For example it was only a 30 minute drive from where we live but we had never been there or previously heard of it.
Sean Mullens whose house we live at and rent works with a charity called living hope and they are doing so much good work there already. Their visions are huge and we pray that God continues to bless them in their work. Our reasoning for visiting is because Sean wants to see if we (in the form of the charity we hope to establish Hope For Harare) can help the schools that are already running and inspire the teachers there.
During the day we visited 3 Pre schools which are operating.The last one we visited was educating and feeding over 450 children from the ages of 2-7 for free with volunteer teachers and staff. The class sizes are between 50 and 80 children and the children will eat one meal of Sadza and vegetables each day which is provided by the school. The community spirit is incredible, they work together to provide for their kids and everyone has a huge smile on their face! Education is so highly valued and all the children want to do is be in school to learn.
Within one minute of arriving Sophie was surrounded by 50-100 children all wanting to sing with her and listen to her. Those who’ve had the privilege of seeing my wife with children (particularly in Africa) know how much she loves them and how much they love her. I just found this place to be so inspiring. These adults do what they can and expect nothing in return. They do it purely and simply because they love the children!
Despite the obvious constraints of schools in this area the children are learning. They sang songs to us, counted to 10, told us the 5 senses and spoke some English. The unpaid teachers know what they’re doing. Our intention would never be to go in there and tell these people what to. Just to offer them some support with teaching using limited resources to teach in a creative way. There is so much more, however that we can learn from them. I think how much fuss our government puts on certain statistics and then you see how these people live and learn together. It puts a lot of things into perspective.
What do we intend to do? Well for now we’re unsure and we need advice and guidance. Firstly we’d love to run a training course at our school where we could invite other teachers to show them how we teach and what things we do in England that mean the children’s learning is maximised. After that we’d love to find the money to fund basic resources for these schools so they can continue their work and improve their standards.
One Way Pre-School is our Zimbabwean mission but maybe God is giving us something else we can put our time and effort in to in the future. If is in our future to work more in Hatcliffe our Zimbabwean adventure will of took a very exciting new chapter for us both. Robin Williams was right when he said at the end of the children’s movie Hook (when portraying Peter Pan) “To live would be the greatest adventure of all”