Making a difference in The Gambia – Pt 2

We featured a guest post from Natalia Finfando back in February, about her experiences in The Gambia and her impending trip to volunteer at a local school. The post generated a good deal of interest, with many people getting in touch to ask how they might be able to help out, visit schools, or indeed volunteer in a similar way to Natalia. Today we present Natalia’s account of her recent trip and her time visiting a couple of local schools, with plenty of practical advice on how we can all help. Natalia has also generously given her contact details for anyone who wishes to get in touch for more of her expert advice.

Natalia with grade 4 in The Gambia

Natalia with grade 4

So the Gambia welcomed me again. This time I visited two primary schools in one of the towns. I think I learnt a lot from this adventure and just thought that I might share some ideas with those of you who want to want to have a similar experience.

First of all, schools are very welcoming and it is extremely easy to visit them. You can do it through one of the trips organized via your tour operator and I am sure it will be a worthwhile experience. Another option, however, if you have a bit more time, is to get in touch with some locals and ask them to take you to a school where their offspring learn. All teachers and headteachers I met were happy to meet me, show me around and talk to me about their school. They were extremely kind and welcoming.

One of the schools offered me a placement and I spent a few days co-teaching with a local teacher. It was a very enriching and inspirational experience. We had a chance to compare our methods and children’s ways of learning. I learnt that maybe here in London we have more resources and teaching gadgets, but in fact teachers all around the world play the same games and use similar tricks to control children’s behaviour!

Natalia in the classroom

Natalia in the classroom

What these schools really need are links with other schools and children. We in London need it too! It is great to have a pen pal in the Gambia and I strongly recommend it. Most of the Gambian schools, however, also need sponsors as they are poorly resourced. They need more books, blackboards and quite often simply chairs or pencils and pencil sharpeners as they are not that cheap in the Gambia. As I wrote before (my first blog entry), people have to pay for children’s education and buy all the stationary. When you have many children, this is not an easy thing to do.

Hence, if you are thinking what to take with you for a trip to a local school, I would advise you to buy a few packs of pens, pencils and text books (available in many local shops and often even at your hotels). Go with an open mind and enjoy. Enjoy the eagerness with which children learn and greet you. Their natural curiosity when they ask you about your country. Their kindness when they share with you their lunch and their smiles when they talk about their families.

If you have a bigger budget, think of starting off a library for a school that might not have it (most of them don’t!). Again, ask some locals or existing charities if you need further guidance. I promise that it will be a wonderful and rewarding experience. You could also sponsor a child or a few children and pay £30 per year for their education. That would be an ultimate gesture of kindness and possible life changing experience for children who would not go to a school otherwise. You can make friends for life and you will have a valid excuse to come to this gorgeous warm and the kindest country every year! The best deal ever!

PS If you need further guidance, I am happy to be contacted on finfando@hotmail.com

Lush and the Fresh Start Foundation

The clapping game

There’s an interesting and inspiring post over on the Lush website. Lush (the purveyors of fine lotions and unguents) recently sent 14 volunteers over to Kwinella in The Gambia, to assist with a school building project (amongst other things) – one of many projects started by the fantastic Fresh Start Foundation. Follow the link above to read all about it on the Lush site, and also see some of their fab images, two of which we’re lucky enough to reproduce here.

Gambian ladies at the pumping station

On arrival we were given a list of tasks, which grew longer as the days passed! The first and most pressing job was the painting of the school buildings, which needed painting inside and out. The two buildings had recently been rebuilt following a storm in July that had knocked them to the ground. Steve, Roisin and Laura were assigned to this task and they not only painted the two rebuilt classrooms, but also painted all the other buildings which hadn’t seen a paint brush since they were built in 1965. The school was completely transformed. The headmaster was thrilled, “I have a new school!” He was especially pleased since we also painted his house, which is in the school grounds.

A Gambia School Visit

The following is a guest post from Jo Wedeman who has worked for The Gambia Experience for over 10 years. This is an account of an emotional visit she undertook to a school on a recent trip to the country.

I can’t actually remember the number of times I’ve visited The Gambia, although I think it’s around fifteen over a period of ten years. I had fallen in love with the place the first time I’d travelled back in 1999. It was the first time I’d been to a developing country and seen such poverty and at first it was a shock, the hassle from the locals was also a shock but I soon got used to how to deal with it and from that point on I could see just how unbelievably friendly and funny the majority of the people were. I even started to enjoy the banter, the bartering and the inventive sales pitches the market stallholders come up with.

Gambian School Children

Gambian School Children

During my many visits I thought I’d seen the majority of sights and experienced all the emotions associated with visiting a developing country – but oh, how I was wrong. On my last visit, last November, I saw the country and more specifically the people in a totally new way. Admittedly I hadn’t travelled to The Gambia in over four years and in that time I’d had two children. I’d experienced new emotions that only a new parent can feel and these travelled with me on my trip to Africa – my first away from my children for so long. I was escorting a press trip on a brief four-day tour of the coastal region and one morning I accompanied a BBC journalist Bridget Blair to a school where she was covering a story for BBC Radio Leicester. The story was about a British woman, Sharon Jervis, who was supporting a school in The Gambia – nothing extraordinary there I thought beforehand, there are hundreds of people supporting schools, hospitals and community projects across the country.

The school’s headmaster collected us from our hotel after breakfast, in a car he’d borrowed, and drove us the half-hour journey to Joyce International School, stopping briefly at a roadside stall to buy some books, posters and pencils to give to the children. As we turned off the tarmac road and started to navigate the potholed sandy tracks between the houses, children playing and goats scavenging I knew we were approaching the village and then I became aware of a distant sound. At first I didn’t think much of it. In The Gambia people live outside: women work, men talk, children play in the streets, there’s always noise. But as we continued the sound got louder until it became apparent that the noise was because of us. For us. We stopped briefly for the journalist to start recording and do a short introduction to what was happening and then we continued. The whole village had come to welcome us. Teachers, parents, children had all come out to the edge of the village to welcome us, chanting “welcome, welcome” over and over again, waving branches and banging drums. The noise was overwhelming and the sight of the children surrounding the car, with their huge smiles and gorgeous eyes, was a sight I will never, ever forget. As we followed the procession to the school I had to keep my sobbing to a minimum for fear of spoiling the radio piece.

The welcoming committee!

The welcoming committee!

On arrival at the school the singing continued and every classroom we went to we were given the biggest welcome from everyone we met. OK, so we were there to publicise the school and they had received a great deal of financial support from the British charity so we expected to be well-received, but I was totally unprepared for the genuine love they had for Sharon and the emotions I would experience. These children were so appreciative of the very basic school buildings and equipment, proud of their new toilets, the kitchen with its bare floors and simple cooking facilities, which meant they all got at least one hot meal a day.

The school kitchen

The school kitchen

One girl stood out because she was the only one not smiling, the only one not rushing to hold our hands, the only one who didn’t seem excited by the visit, who didn’t sing and didn’t say how grateful she was to Sharon. She was clinging to her teacher and when I asked why I was told it was the first time she’d ever seen a white person and was she was scared. I smiled, tried to be as friendly as possible but moved away – how do you expect a small child to understand what is going on?

Outside the classrooms I chatted to some men and women who helped in the kitchen and some who lived in the village and had come along to meet the visitors from England. They were the happiest, smiliest people I have ever met. They urged me to take their photographs over and over again, delighting in the fact that they could see their own images on the back of the digital camera. They posed by themselves, with different friends and did dances for me. The most forthcoming of them even asked to carry my bag, parading around the courtyard like a catwalk model. Some people might have felt intimidated about handing over their bag to a complete stranger in a remote village in West Africa, but I had no concerns that this incredibly warm and friendly lady would simply hand it straight back.

Eyes and smiles

Eyes and smiles

As I was waiting for Bridget to finish her interviews I wandered around the school yard and started to get the feeling of déjà vu , but I had visited a number of Gambian schools in the past and the simple buildings can all look fairly similar. But then it occurred to me, I had been here before about six years ago. The buildings had been in a much worse state then, there had been no kitchen and no toilets, there hadn’t been the same enthusiastic welcome but I had been here before. And then the appreciation of how much had changed for these children and for the villagers really hit me. I realised how much one person can do to help and suddenly I felt very very humble.

If you want to read and hear more about Bridget’s project there is some information on the BBC Leicester site that is well worth a look.