Utah Artist, Hadley Rampton, Supports Project Wezesha through Art Sales

Upcoming June-July sales of Hadley Rampton’s watercolors from the ‘Zanzibar’ series will benefit Project Wezesha!  Keep reading to learn more!!  We’re so excited!

Hadley Rampton is an exceptional artist from Salt Lake City, Utah.  She is perhaps best known for her remarkable plein air oil paintings of wilderness landscapes in Northern Utah.  However, her talents with watercolor are equally impressive.  For her watercolor inspiration, Hadley makes annual trips to Europe to capture the history, architecture and culture of old cities.  She strives to find the story of time gone by in the old buildings and cobble stone streets.

Hadley Rampton painting the sunset over Lake Tanganyika, Tanzania

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May 2011 Update on Amahoro Secondary School

It is so exciting to see the progress on Amahoro Secondary School.  Project Wezesha is lucky to have Lucas as our co-founder and in-country director because he is really driving this project with his encouragement, diligence and excellent photos.  He just sent 27 photos via email to share the progress!

Since November, there have been some interruptions in the work due to intense rainy periods and some illnesses.  Our General Contractor, Isaya, got very sick in January, but he’s better now and back to work – keeping his crew motivated and doing stellar work.

Recent building progress was possible thanks to contributions from friends and family over the holidays and into February when the Ignite Salt Lake presentation garnered some attention for the work of Project Wezesha.  I also drove some funds into Project Wezesha as my birthday wish on Facebook this year.  We’ll have to arrange a few good fundraisers in the summer before I head back in August to make sure all the completed classrooms can get their roofs this summer.

The first big successes of the winter building endeavor were the two additional classrooms that Isaya and his crew finished.

 

After completing this row of rooms (4 classrooms and 1 office space), Isaya began work on the foundation for the next set of 5 rooms.  This required the very difficult job of clearing the land and digging the trenches for the foundation.  The foundation consists of a cement/lyme mix poured over boulders placed in the trenches.  These stones and the sand that gets mixed with the cement are valuable to local villages – in this case, the village of Mgaraganza has donated all the stones and sand as well as the labor required to get these heavy stones and buckets of sand to the site from a nearby dry riverbed.  I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, those buckets are HEAVY and the women carry them with no hands, babies on their backs and flip flops on their feet.  I’m ever impressed!

 

Again, without Lucas the work would likely get done at a much slower rate.  Lucas is often visiting the village and talking with the local leaders to remind them that the school is a community project.  After the rainy season, Lucas stirred everyone into action again by checking in and encouraging them to pitch in.  I think he’s getting good at giving pep talks (as you can see in the picture where he’s captivating them). 

In addition to the villagers of Mgaraganza, a group of students in the Project Wezesha scholarship program came out to help!  These students are already going to secondary school at Mwandiga Secondary School and PW helps with their school fees, uniforms and materials.  But still, they have come out to Mgaraganza with Lucas to chip in!  They carried sand and water and then took some breaks to make sure Isaya was staying on task. 🙂
 
After a strong push to get the foundation dug and round up enough stones and sand, the workers finished the foundation for the next row of classes!  The next step will be to buy bricks, transport them to the site and start raising them to the sky!  So exciting!!

 

Lucas, you rock! Asante Sana!!

Project Wezesha Founder Speaks at Ignite Salt Lake

Ignite Salt Lake is part of a worldwide speaker series entitled Ignite.  The slogan for Ignite is “Englighten us, but make it quick!”  The idea is that regular folks from around the world have a chance to speak about something they are passionate about … in five minutes!

After submitting a proposal and being accepted to present, each speaker prepares a powerpoint presentation on their topic with the following guidelines: You must have 20 slides which will turn automatically every 15 seconds for a total presentation time of 5 minutes exactly.  The range of possible topics is unlimited, so the audience is sure to be engaged and entertained as the ideas fly at them all night.  The speakers this year presented on topics ranging from communicating directly with astronauts in space to hunting underwater.

In 2011, Ignite hosted its seventh event in Salt Lake City, Utah.  Other Ignite events took place around the world in cities such as Dublin, Mumbai, Bucharest, Amsterdam and up to 100 more!  I found out about Ignite through another friend’s Facebook wall.  She was attending this Ignite event in Salt Lake City and I was intrigued.  After finding out there was a call for proposals, I decided to give it a whirl and my topic would be “What happens when you say “Yes” to the request of a village Chief?”  The presentation was fun to plan and exciting to deliver – and at the risk of sounding overly confident, I think I nailed it!  I even recieved some donations in the days that followed from people who were there and were impressed by the work we’re doing in Tanzania!  Thank you very much to those fabulous supporters and all of you who have contributed along the way!

So, without further ado – here is my presentation, which tells the story of Project Wezesha.

Watoto Wanataka Kusema ‘Mambo’ to You!

Saidi is one of the newest students in our scholarship program.  He just started secondary school in Mwandiga town this past January (2011).  I recorded him last summer in a very informal little chat at his house.   When you hear the voice in the background prompting him a bit, that’s Lucas – making my cryptic question about what he enjoys doing when he’s not in school a little more comprehensible.  Enjoy this bright youngster!

Gifts of Education for the Holidays

This holiday season, you’re likely being pulled in many directions for your holiday shopping.  I get several emails a day about how I should shop this year – all worthy causes, such as Seva.org, Kiva.org, Heiffer.org, Amnesty International, and many others.  So why would you even consider Project Wezesha as your option this year?  Well ….

For better or worse, we’re a very small organization with one important project on the table and over a dozen wonderful children in our scholarship program.  Because we are so small, all of your donations go to one of three possible places – the building of Amahoro Secondary School, the school fees of our 12 rock star students and the salary of our co-founder, Lucas Lameck – which is small by our standards but life-changing for this amazing young man.  Lucas is currently using half of his salary to attain his own high school diploma with the hopes of one day going to university, which will only enhance his capacity to work on improving access to education for children in this region.

Here’s another amazing reason.  Yesterday, while I was sitting in a NonProfit Academy workshop on High Impact Philanthropy, I received a text from Tanzania.  It’s the first text I’ve ever received from anyone there (Lucas and I usually email or skype).  Here’s what the email read (word for word/letter for letter):

My name is Dibeith. How are You and your fine that we have very happy because we can pass an exams. me and saidi. can help me to get the communicate you for now Thank You. Continue reading “Gifts of Education for the Holidays”

PW Students Visit Amahoro Secondary School

Last week, Lucas passed through Kiganza village en route to Mgaraganza village to collect more pictures of the school.  On his way, he picked up some of the Project Wezesha students who were making the long journey home from school in Mwandiga.  For those that live in Kiganza village, such as Hindu, Edina, Ismael and Diana, that trek is about an hour long on foot.  For those that live in Mgaraganza, there is another 30 minutes through the forest to get home – that impacts Zainabu, Silvasia and Khadija.

On this sunny day, Lucas invited all of them to go the extra distance through Mgaraganza village to the school building site to see the progress. They wandered through the lush forest (rainy season just passed) and up to the school where they were so excited to see the progress. Along the way, they also picked up Matamshi and Judith, two of our students who go to secondary school in Kagongo village. In this picture, they are crossing the river that divides Kiganza village and Mgaraganza village.

 
Crossing the River that borders Kiganza and Mgaraganza Villages

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Giving Thanks-Asante-Urakoze!!

On this lovely Thanksgiving Day, I would like to give thanks to everyone who has made Project Wezesha a great success over the past year.  Lucas and I had a simple plan when we sat at the Sun City Cafe in Kigoma in July 2009.  We just wanted to give out scholarships to a handful of children who wanted to go to secondary school, but couldn’t afford it. 

Now, only a year later, we are happy to be supporting 12 children in secondary schools in Mwandiga, Bitale and Kiganza villages.  We also have three young students awaiting test results who hope to join the program in January!  In addition, we are so happy to be building Amahoro Secondary School with the village of Mgaraganza.  So much went into making this all possible – and I give thanks for all of it!  Continue reading “Giving Thanks-Asante-Urakoze!!”

September Update on Amahoro Secondary School

Welcome back for another quick update!  For those of you who are new to Project Wezesha, make sure to browse through the July blog entries as I spent three weeks in July 2010 working in Mgaraganza village and Kigoma town – making this happen – with my in-country director, Lucas Lameck.
I spoke with Lucas twice over the past couple of months.  We have a plan to chat with each other every other Sunday.  Thank goodness for Skype Mobile on my Droid!  Now staying in touch is easy!  (That sounded like a commercial, but I swear no one is paying me … or this school would be finished by now.)  Continue reading “September Update on Amahoro Secondary School”

August Update on Amahoro Secondary School

I left Tanzania exactly one month ago! In that time, so much has happened on the school front. When I returned to Salt Lake City, I sent Lucas another large sum of money from the Project Wezesha account. I couldn’t leave the money in our shared Tanzanian account because I was pulling it out daily from the ATM – limits enforced. Now, I am happy to be able to wire large sums as they come into Project Wezesha, for the building progress to continue.

Lucas reported through email and with photographs on progress since I left. The foundation for the four classrooms and the headmaster’s office is complete! Two truckloads containing 13,000 bricks have been delivered to the building site and the walls are going up as I type! I am so excited to see those images and hope that we will see a few completed rooms by the year’s end. Here are some pictures of the work that took place after I left one month ago.

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I Know This Much is True

These are my Summer 2010 final thoughts.

I know this much is true – (dedicated to Sara Bridge)

I’m writing on a netbook computer in Dar es Salaam and as I look around, I see only varying shades of brown skin and hear only the occasional word or phrase that I understand. I have a thin film of sweat all over my body and my shirt is damp under the arms and I stink. Coins are jingled deliberately in the hands of young boys walking the city, selling peanuts from baskets. Motorcycles and loud banging on metal are wracking my brain. Taxi drivers hover for the hopeful sighting of someone in need of a ride with big cash in his pocket. Some women walk by with kangas tied around their waists, but more are dressed for the city; most of the men are wearing the distinctive small Muslim hats and every handful of hours, the Mosque reminds all of us what some should be doing. The smiles – when they come to life – light up my day. I’ve never seen more perfect, straight, white teeth on more beautiful faces. Work is done inefficiently – with brooms made from small sticks, trash is thrown in the street so someone can pick it up every morning at 5am and coffee seems to take 30 minutes to brew. I am in the city and it’s loud and impersonal. Continue reading “I Know This Much is True”