Tag Archives: Culture
Building a school in Dairuharu, Brikama
Earlier in the year we received a letter from clients of The Gambia Experience telling us about a nursery school that they had visited that was in desperate need of assistance.
As it happened I was visiting The Gambia myself the following week and took the opportunity to pop into the school. We weren’t exactly sure where the school was… somewhere in a district of Brikama called Dairuharu but after asking around we were taken to a family compound. What I found really shocked me. I was shown into a dark, tiny room with one of the walls looking as if it was about to collapse. My lower lip started trembling as I made out 15 children, with their teacher Amie, sitting amongst the rubble. I’ve visited many schools in The Gambia but I have never reacted like this before. Pulling myself together, I had a long chat with Amie and the children and, although I didn’t make any promises, I said I would try to help.
There are over 100 children in the area that need a school. The villagers had built the original building in mud bricks but did not have the money to finish it before the rainy season and the school fell down.
Amie, Fatou and the headmistress, Yama, are trying to continue with the school in the room I saw which is in someone’s compound but apart from the terrible conditions the owner now wants the space back.
As chairman of a community group called “Nyodema” (which means “Helping each other” in Mandinka) I told the rest of the committee about the school. They were just as concerned as I was, however, we do not have anyone based in The Gambia and have never been involved in a building project before. We felt it was too much for us to take on alone. What to do?
We approached the charity, Karmic Angels, and when we told them about the school they selected a project manager to oversee the building work if we could raise the funds.
In April Shelagh (Nyodema’s treasurer) and I returned to The Gambia and met up with the Alkalo (village head), teachers and parents as well as Lamin and Pa Louis from Karmic Angels.
I’m happy to say that we have already started fund-raising and so far have collected over £2,000 thanks to the generosity of our supporters and the Gambia Experience’s clients who first told us about the school. Our aim for 2010 is to build the first classroom (with proper foundations and cement rather than mud blocks) and purchase the necessary desks and chairs etc.
Next month Nyodema is holding their annual festival “Nyodema by the Sea” – all proceeds from the raffle will go towards re-building the school.
More information on the festival, Nyodema’s weekly African drumming workshops and Gospel Choir, as well as their on going health and education projects in The Gambia can be found on their website www.nyodema.org
George Butler’s Travel Sketch Book
You may well have been keeping an eye on George Butler as he sketches his was along a 8,500km journey from London to Libreville, the capital of Gabon. He’s been with the Tuareg’s in Algeria, visited the Festival in the Desert in Mali and has slowly made his way south through Senegal to the smiling coast of The Gambia. He’s helped bring fish in at Banjul fish market, and spent a lazy day on the River Gambia and has now made his way up river to the fantastic chimp rehabilitation centre set up by Stella Marsden. The posts themselves are all a great insight into the way of life in each country, but it’s the sketches that really capture something new. And whether the sketches are simple captures of a human face or a widescreen view of intense human activity they have a vividness about them that paradoxically photography often fails to capture. The sketches really need to be seen in large format so click on the images to see them in all their glory.
The lost script
An interesting article over at The Boston Globe, which explores the potential historical value of documents written in Ajami, a kind of hybrid script used in the Sudanic region of Africa from around the 10th century onwards. As Islam spread south from northern Africa, and the tribal holy men slowly converted to the Islamic religion, so they began to adapt the Arabic script to communicate the tenets of the religion to the local people whos till spoke the traditional languages such as Wolof, still spoken in The Gambia today. The result was the Ajami script, in which 1000s of documents were written – everything from travel itineraries to details of wedding plans and farming techniques – which until now have been largely ignored. As we learn more of the script and uncover more and more documents the depth of our understanding of this area of Africa could be greatly enhanced.























