Creating Perspectives in a Polytechnic in Kenya

In 2009, when I visited the Sigul Youth Polytechnic in Anyiko (West Kenya) for the first time, it consisted of two rooms and a half. The front room served as the office of the assistant chief, who is in charge of administrative tasks in the village. The other one was a nursery school for a few children when it rained. Otherwise they sat outside under a tree. The third room had been built half way, but it had never been finished and the unprotected walls were withered.

The-Old-Space

The old space from previous visits

 

The people in the community, especially the Board of Governors, a group of elderly men dedicated to make this thing happen, had started this project several years ago. School education is highly valued and obligatory in Kenya, but employment is scarce, especially in the countryside. Therefore the secondary schools regularly produce hundreds of graduates who have been trained to find a white collar jobs but end up back to their parents’ farms.

Polytechnic-Crew

The team with the vision to make it happen

 

The community needed an alternative for young people becoming desperate and feeling neglected. They decided to set up a polytechnic school teaching tailoring, mechanics, electrical engineering, masonry and other practical skills. But mostly the school intends to provide a perspective even for those families who cannot afford to pay university fees or job hunting ventures.

Working-with-Sewing-Materials

Hard at work

 

With The Wandering Samaritan funds from the Miracle Bank, my husband and I bought a new sewing machine in Nairobi and transported it to Anyiko. There we had an old table fixed for it and brought to the school. Now, they have five sewing machines, and only two girls have to share a machine, so that everyone gets to sew and train a couple of times a day.

 

When we went there to deliver the machine, the girls took my measures and decided that they wanted to make me a dress for Christmas, when they will have done their exams. With those certificates, they can set up their own small business, or work for someone who already has one. They can continue learning and become constructors themselves. But most of all, they have something to present and to be proud of. They have a perspective and the good feeling of having accomplished something.

 

2 Comments
  • Derrick Mutugi
    Posted at 03:44h, 30 July Reply

    Hello,

    I am really humbled by wonderful work you do for less privelledged, especially here in kenya.
    We have a homescience & tailoring school called Lydia’s Tailoring Centre (NGO) in Kibira slums of Nairobi that has really gone under due to lack of sustainable funds. This is a charitable NGO.
    All we asking you is to kindly assist us go back to operation.

    Derrick
    CEO

  • clinton kinuthia
    Posted at 07:54h, 13 February Reply

    well done job. keep the fire burning. We really appreciate your work.thanks be to God for making you reach at that point. lets hope you will achieve more.

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