Dear donors, families, friends of REACH! for SA,
As the sun begins to set on 2021, we would like to take a moment to acknowledge the incredible support we have received that makes this project possible, to give a brief summary of the year past and a glimpse at what lies ahead.
Unable to hold any significant fundraiser since our first auction over two years ago, we have nevertheless been able to continue our mission of changing the world one preschool at a time, thanks to your incredible generosity. From a substantial annual contribution from Generations for Global Giving, (a non-profit that supports a community center for the elderly in Lima, Peru) to donations made on our web-page, to monthly contributions from several of you who have been with us from the very beginning, to the sale of artwork at Seattle Grounds coffee shop, we were able to deliver our third school in January 2021, purchase, convert, and prepare our fourth school along with play structures, toilets, and classroom supplies for delivery on January 13th, 2022, and also position ourselves to purchase and convert our fifth school for 2023! We can’t wait to share with you the expressions on those children’s faces! On behalf of Shelley and I, the Chief, community, teachers and students of Amajingqi, we thank you. We could not do this without you.
Many of you know teacher Aude who, with her son Patrick, both artists, will be joining us this trip to paint the mural on the fourth container. Most of the rest of the work has been done—windows and doors installed, floor laid, interior panels and painting. We will work in Gonubie, a suburb of East London where we rent living space, a workshop, yard, tools, pickup and trailer, and from where we will leave for Amajingqi on the 13th Jan to deliver it in time for the opening of the new school year. On site we will install the roof and the water catchment system, and contract out the toilets, and play structures with slides and swings.
Our single biggest challenge remains how to deliver constant, quality curriculum to children who already face an educational deficit, through teachers who despite doing the best they can with what they have, do not grasp many of the critical concepts necessary to instill a fundamental love for learning that will keep children in the classroom beyond grade school. ITEC, our partner non-profit who do a fantastic job training mothers into teachers, are also limited to how much they can teach students most of whom haven’t graduated high school. We are meeting with ITEC in January to present some of our ideas and to brainstorm new ways forward. We will keep you updated.
Covid remains an obstacle in many people’s lives, though fortunately the new variant appears to have only mild symptoms, and the government has left restrictions unchanged. For our sake, and the communities struggling with the effects of the shutdown, let’s hope it remains that way.
It leaves us now to thank you again, each and every one of you, and to wish all of you a Blessed Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Omisoka, and may the New Year be filled with all the peace and happiness you deserve.
Warmest wishes and deepest appreciation,
Ralph and Shelley
RESPONSE:
Dear All of you on Ralph’s and Shelley’s “REACH! For SA” mailing list,
I am one of Ralph’s uncles in South Africa; a retired (but still working in an allied avenue) country veterinarian where Ralph spent his earlier years.
Thank you for your continued interest in, and generosity to, this fine project. Sure, our country – like most in the world – has its problems; but we also have a thousand more assets and advantages. Illiteracy is one of our major drawbacks and as a cynic I think our government averts wide educational advancement to maintain an unintelligent majority to keep them in power. But my aim in writing to you ain’t about politics!
It is simply to emphasize the adage “if you throw enough mud at a wall, some of it will stick.” This project of Ralph and Shelley’s is NOT simply throwing mud, no! It’s about throwing well fertilised, well seeded and watered topsoil at a sculpted wall so that flourishing gardens may be seen as a result! (See attached pic!)
The Vice-chancellor of our Rhodes University at Grahamstown, Prof Sizwe Mabizela, was as a little boy tending his father’s small herd of cattle in a rural area. Though fortuitous humble schooling - much in line with what “REACH! For SA” is providing – Sizwe (I can call him that since we are now buddies!) proceeded up the ladder eventually obtaining his PhD in mathematics at Pennsylvania State U.
So I encourage you all collectively, around Ralph and Shelly, to “GO, YOU GOOD THINGS!”
I wish you all a blessed CHRISTmas.
With thanks, awe and regards
Tod
We make a living by what we get; we make a life by what we give. (Sir Winston Churchill)