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It’s day three, and today we donned our smartest clothes to see the British High Commissioner, Martin Shearman.

Meeting the British High Commissioner

Meeting the British High Commissioner

In a really positive meeting, he congratulated us on what he described as our “culturally sensitive” approach of talking to the locals and people in the know about what we want to achieve in Uganda. A common problem here is organisations just transplanting western ideas, rather than listening to what the local people really need. And we would be making a mistake if we simply replicated another charity’s model – ultimately our aim is to set up a project that no one else is doing and is really going to make a difference to the lives of abandoned babies. I’m immensely proud of our team – we have achieved so much in a short space of time. My wingman, Brian, continues to ask exactly the right questions, and his contacts have managed to set up meetings with the great and the good here. His dedication and passion for this project never ceases to amaze me – I have utmost respect for his opinion, and we would not be where we are now without his invaluable advice. And our Saff has pulled off a miracle – after producing weekly video updates on Bebo’s The Gap Year she promised never to attempt to upload a video in Africa ever again (the slowness and unreliability of the connection make it one of the most time-consuming jobs ever) but now she is doing it every day! Last night was a real test of her patience – after waiting 3 hours to upload a video, she discovered it hadn’t worked and had to start all again. Ouch! But it’s up now, and we really hope you enjoy the videos. We feel they give a great insight into what we are trying to do, so all those hours Saff spends watching a timeline is worth it. We would love to know what you think of our videos and welcome any suggestions.

Counting down the minutes

Counting down the minutes

Tomorrow we are giving ourselves a much-needed day off. Brian is a fishing fanatic and has been looking forward to a spot of angling on the Nile all week, while I can’t wait to spend some time with the kids at Sanyu. See you on Sunday, folks, and please do keep those questions coming.

Show us your support and become a fan on Facebook – http://www.childsifoundation.org/go/facebook/planning

Tomorrow we are leaving for Uganda for 21 days. I am as excited as I am nervous.

Check out our team t-shirts

Were giving love

We're giving love

Here is an overview of the first week of our trip:

Day 1 – Wednesday 15th April

  • Arrive at Sanyu Babies Home
  • Spend the morning at Sanyu Babies Home
  • Interview Barbara, administrator of SBH
  • Meet Charles Mugasa
  • Meet our team – Norah, Dr Catherine and Dennis

Day 2 – Thursday 16th April

Day 3 – Friday 17th April

  • Meet British High Commissioner
  • Visit Mulago hospital

Day 4 – Saturday 18th April

  • Day at Sanyu / relax

Day 5 – Sunday 19th April

  • Meet parents to discuss reasons behind abandonment

Day 6 – Monday 20th April

Day 7 – Tuesday 21st April

Day 8 – Wednesday 22nd April – Decision Day

  • Sign off our ‘model of care’

Please keep in touch x


Hi there I’m Saffron and I shall be heading out to Uganda in a few days with Lucy and Brian to film the planning trip. As Producer / Director I have worked on a variety of entertainment programmes for BBC and Channel 4. Recently I was a P/D on “The Gap Year” for Bebo, an interactive online travel adventure following 6 travellers all round the world on the highs and lows of a 6 month Gap Year.

Saffron - our Producer

Saffron - our Producer

Africa and I have a bit of a history, like Brian the continent never let go with me either. I first landed there back in ‘98 when I went on an overland trip through Uganda and Kenya in my university summer holiday. Since then I have been back several times and on Gap Year I travelled for 6 months filming through various parts of South, East, North and West Africa.  I am really chuffed to be using my skills to help this amazing project get off the ground.

In our three weeks in Uganda we really want to feel like you are there with us through the entire trip right from the moment we arrive in Uganda. This is going to be an important trip and we want YOU to be involved.

Watch our daily videos, be it in on Facebook, Bebo, YouTube or the main CiF website. Follow our twitter updates, comment on our blog and videos and check out our pictures. We will be also asking for your help and your feedback on how we are doing so far with your ideas and questions, don’t be shy get involved! The beauty is you can do it all from the comfort of your home, office, on your laptop, blackberry or iphone in any WIFI zone you choose, just switch on and get online.

So for now it’s on to finalising our shooting schedule, checking through the kit, praying the internet in Uganda is up to it and packing the well travelled rucksack once more!

7 days to go!

Hello, I’m Brian Waller. I am the Child’s i Foundation social work adviser going out to Uganda with Lucy.

For most of my life Africa has held a magical grip on my imagination. When I was in my twenties I lived and worked as a teacher in Tanzania and, as friends predicted, the continent has never let go. It is like nowhere else on earth – beautiful, poor, desperately so, but its people and its landscapes and the sheer feel of this special place make it just magnetic. Africa is also the world’s tragedy – with so much terrible poverty – and now yet more disease and war.  Whilst other parts of the world  which were poor – India , South America , China – are now slowly  becoming  more prosperous  Africa continues to suffer from neglect and corruption and its peoples and, above all,  its children pay an awful price.

Little girl living in a slum

Little girl living in a slum

Before Lucy Buck came into my life I had been running, until my retirement, a worldwide Family Support organisation, Home-Start International, which operates in South Africa, Kenya and Uganda. I recall many meetings in towns, cities and remote villages with desperate parents struggling to cope with poverty, civil war and HIV/AIDS and who were thrilled that anyone actually was concerned at their plight. Well we were and I know, from practical experience, that even simple help and support can make a huge difference and encourage parents to carry on even when faced with what seem like insuperable odds.

“Would you be interested in being the Social Work Adviser to Child’s i Foundation?”
were Lucy’s words when we first met last September.  She told me about her wonderful dream and daunting  ambition  – to help abandoned  babies in Uganda – and after  a few conversations  to  see if she was serious – she most certainly was   -   I was on board as an enthusiastic  member of the team.

My job is to bring my experience of running residential homes as well as services for families under stress to help Lucy and the charity  “get it right”“ in Kampala. This visit is going to be massively important as we talk with the UK’s  High Commissioner,  Ugandan Government Ministers, politicians and officials, other charities and, above all, ordinary people and parents in the slums of Kampala about how we  can help them deal with  this terrible problem.

Please email us your best wishes, your thoughts and ideas so that this journey can be truly productive and help us create the best possible service for children whose very lives will depend upon it.

In 14 days time, we are going out to Uganda for 3 weeks to conduct a planning trip.

Our aim is to build a centre of excellence to provide life saving care to abandoned babies and return children to their own families or to foster or adoptive families. This trip is going to determine just how we are going to deliver our promise.

We are taking Brian Waller, our most capable social work adviser who is now working with us to develop our social care approach. He has worked in Uganda and has years of experience in working with families and young children.

21 days is not a lot of time especially as we need to find the answers to some fundamental questions including:

Why are babies being abandoned?

More to the point why do mothers abandon their babies? Is there anyway we could help prevent mothers abandoning their babies in the first place? Tackle the root cause of abandonment and work with mothers to prevent abandonment and ultimately be the people they turn to instead of abandoning their newborn baby in a derelict building?

William from the Sanyu Babies Home

William from the Sanyu Babies' Home

What?

We now need to decide exactly what extra services we are going to provide beyond the immediate care of newly abandoned babies. Should we, for example, design our centre to accommodate mothers too on a daily or residential basis? We need to talk to government, existing projects and, if possible, mothers themselves about our plans and see where the gaps in provisions are in childcare.

Where?

Location is key. Our project must be firmly based in a local community.  It has to be genuinely supported by  the local people and local agencies and feel “African” and not something transplanted from outside the continent.   If we cannot achieve that  ‘buy in” from the very beginning our project will never be sustainable.

How?

We want to find foster  or adoptive homes for  abandoned children but this is not so common an idea as it is here.  It would be easier to look after them long term in an institution but we don’t believe being another orphan statistic is best for the child.  Our challenge is to find existing and reliable charities who do this and family support work  well and who could work in partnership with us.

And there’s more…

Every day we want to upload a daily video and blog to keep supporters updated on the progress of our project but we need to see if this works on a practical level. We are lucky enough to take out Saffron Jackson, Producer of The Gap Year who has travelled around Africa and is an expert at filming, shooting and uploading videos so if anyone can do it Saffron can but it will be an interesting exercise to see if the idea in theory works in reality. We’ll find out soon enough…

What you can do…

We need your input as this is your charity and we want you to get involved. We want to have a conversation with you so please send us your questions, add your comments, send us ideas, give us advice and support and help us create a centre which we can all be proud of.

Today we had a creative brainstorm to discuss the tagline and mission statement of the Child’s i Foundation. We were very lucky to have Adil Abrar (strategist) and David McCandless (writer) at the session, both are brilliant and have worked on campaigns for Amnesty.

Brainstorm

Brainstorm

After half an hour spent explaining the project, Adil (quite rightly) pointed out that we have lots of USP’s but what we really needed to work out were our key messages – what were the reasons behind setting up the organisation. Why was I doing this project?

I immediately remembered Abraham, a baby who died of Meningitis aged just 4 months old.

Abraham

Abraham

He had been abandoned in the taxi park when he was two months old and bought to an orphanage in Kampala. As I was stood burying Abraham under a mound of mud in an unmarked grave what really upset me was that, in Abraham’s short life, no one had ever cherished him. He was abandoned, he was an orphan and then he died. No one ever noticed his first smile or loved him like he was their own child, no one paid attention to his rash and more tragically, no one really truly missed him when he died.

Abrahams Funeral

Abraham's Funeral

These babies have no one to fight their corner. Abandoned in rubbish tips, toilets, taxi parks or by the roadside, they have no one and it is up to us to not only keep them alive but to give them a life. I don’t want children to grow up in orphanages, another statistic to add to the 2 million orphans in Uganda. I want them to be loved by their very own family.

Some really good ideas came out of the session – Adil suggested the project was like a co-operative and people could own a share in it similar to myfootballclub. I am really excited about the collaborative nature of this project because I really want people to feel like they are part of the project. If people give us their hard- earned money I want to be able to tell people exactly where their money is going – that’s why the Internet is the perfect tool to engage and inform our supporters.

One of the ideas for a tagline which came out of the session was ‘We make families, not orphans’. I am still not decided, so I’ll keep posting ideas up on the site until we come up with one we like.

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Maureen Our Social Worker and Carer Betty updating the Management team.

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Child's i Foundation is a charitable company limited by guarantee, registered in England and Wales with registered company number 6674427 and registered charity number 1126212.
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