David is a partial orphan whose father succumbed to HIV/AIDS. He was left under the care of his HIV/AIDS-positive, poor, and unemployed mother. His mother was not able to meet the needs of him and his three siblings. He was at-risk of dropping out of school to engage in child-labor. David is happy to be admitted to Ah-Gah-pay Mercy Children's Centre - Kenya where his needs are met. He is doing well in his academic work. His ambition is to become an airplane engineer. His favorite subject is science, while his favorite game is football. His favorite food is chapati. Please sponsor him to help him realize his dream.
School Year 2014
Slyvia Dzinkambani is the third born in a family of eight children. She currently comes from Kwenje Village but originally came from Matsimbe Village, Traditional Authority Champiti in Ntcheu District. She lives with her cousin who is a Ward Attendant at Nandumbo Health Centre. Her entrepreneurial parents rely on selling tomatoes and onions along the road in the village as income for their household basic needs. But this income could not keep any child in secondary school. Slyvia who is very quiet likes playing the traditional game, Bawo, during her free time and reading a book called World Fun by Schonell which her cousin gave to her. After secondary school, she would like to be trained as a nurse and work professionally in the hospital. She is third in her class.
School Year 2013
David is a partial orphan whose father succumbed to HIV/AIDS. He was left under the care of his HIV/AIDS-positive, poor, and unemployed mother. His mother was not able to meet the needs of him and his three siblings. He was at-risk of dropping out of school to engage in child-labor. David is happy to be admitted to Ah-Gah-pay Mercy Children's Centre - Kenya where his needs are met. He is doing well in his academic work. His ambition is to become an airplane engineer. His favorite subject is science, while his favorite game is football. His favorite food is chapati. Please sponsor him to help him realize his dream.
School Year 2013
Freda writes: "My father is a government teacher in a local government school in a village near Okurase and comes home with a meager salary that can barely feed the home much less pay for my fees. My mother sells food to support my father to pay for my school fees. My father has established a private school in our village to help improve the quality and standard of education in the village as his social responsibility to the community. Because of the very low income status of the village, parents are unable to pay for school fees so that my father can use some to pay for my education. So it is ironic that my father, who has the education of the children and youth in the village at heart, which compelled him to establish the school, cannot pay for his own daughter's school fees because he is compelled to run the school like a charity organization instead of a private business to support his family. We, in total support of our father's decision to educate other children, are glad to help educate children who are not from our family. We hope that someone, somewhere, will also be kind enough to support our education too."
School Year 2012
Slyvia Dzinkambani is the third born in a family of eight children. She currently comes from Kwenje Village but originally came from Matsimbe Village, Traditional Authority Champiti in Ntcheu District. She lives with her cousin who is a Ward Attendant at Nandumbo Health Centre. Her entrepreneurial parents rely on selling tomatoes and onions along the road in the village as income for their household basic needs. But this income could not keep any child in secondary school. Slyvia who is very quiet likes playing the traditional game, Bawo, during her free time and reading a book called World Fun by Schonell which her cousin gave to her. After secondary school, she would like to be trained as a nurse and work professionally in the hospital. She is third in her class.
School Year 2012