Joshua P.'s 2018 school year has been fully funded! Click here to support a similar student.

Raised $175 from 1 donor Needs $0

About

Class Rank: 2/244 My most difficult time in my life is when my mother did not have enough money to pay for my education. She had to borrow money from bank to send me to school. There were times when she failed to make the payment, the bank people came to our house and took her belongings. My dream is to be a surgical doctor. In order to reach my dreams I have to study hard, especially the subjects like Physics, Biology and Chemistry. And also learn from those successful surgeons. My happiest moment is when I learned well and scored the best among my fellow students. The moment I felt proud of myself is when I got A grade in Standard 7 National Exam. After I become a doctor I plan to help the sick people in my community. I also plan to help the School Fund by donating to it, so more needy students like me can continue their education.

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Total $175
  • Tuition, Exams, Uniform
    $175

Joshua P.'s Funding history

Year Grade Receipt Status
2018 Form 4
2017 Form 3
2016 Form 2

Journal

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Hi School Fund Students

Sorry it took me a while to write to you. For those of you who is receiving my journal the first time, let me introduce myself.

My name is Indy. I am currently living at the same town as Ms Judy. She and I went to high school together. I am so happy to have this opportunity to get to know you.

I used to work with computers for many many years. Do you like to use computers?

Yesterday I met with some of my old school friends for lunch. These are the friends I have for almost 50 years. We talked about our school days when we were 12 years old.
It brought many happy memories.

Do you enjoy your school? Now is the time to form good friendship with your classmates? What do you do with your classmates? Do you study together? Do you talk and share secrets? I know you have a lot of study to do. Hopefully you can find some time to do some fun stuff with your friends.

Please write back to let me know what interests you.

Until next time,
your friend,
Indy
Hello Madam Karen,
It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me, thanks to God I am doing fine in most of my deeds.

Well, thanks to God that we started our annual examination on Monday which are the exams of finalizing the Form three education year and we finished them today. In my consideration the exams were normal thus nor simple nor hard but I think it is because I a bit prepared myself for it. Today teacher has announced us that we are going to have a short break till 8th of next month for we didn't have one on September. So once we go to school on 8th there we will receive our reports on what we sow for all this term of study. My plan right now is to start preparing for Form four topics so as to reduce the luggage once the Form four study begin, though now we are going on with carrying out different projects or known to be research.

I am looking forward to hear from you. I am wishing you blessed weekend.
Hello sir Jonathan,
It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me, thanks to God I am doing fine in most of my deeds.

Well, thanks to God that we started our annual examination on Monday which are the exams of finalizing the Form three education year and we finished them today. In my consideration the exams were normal thus nor simple nor hard but I think it is because I a bit prepared myself for it. Today teacher has announced us that we are going to have a short break till 8th of next month for we didn't have one on September. So once we go to school on 8th there we will receive our reports on what we sow for all this term of study. My plan right now is to start preparing for Form four topics so as to reduce the luggage once the Form four study begin, though now we are going on with carrying out different projects or known to be research.

I am looking forward to hear from you. I am wishing you blessed weekend.
BE BLESSED
Hello Madam Ying,
It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me, thanks to God I am doing fine in most of my deeds.

Well, thanks to God that we started our annual examination on Monday which are the exams of finalizing the Form three education year and we finished them today. In my consideration the exams were normal thus nor simple nor hard but I think it is because I a bit prepared myself for it. Today teacher has announced us that we are going to have a short break till 8th of next month for we didn't have one on September. So once we go to school on 8th there we will receive our reports on what we sow for all this term of study. My plan right now is to start preparing for Form four topics so as to reduce the luggage once the Form four study begin, though now we are going on with carrying out different projects or known to be research.
I am looking forward to hear from you. I am wishing you blessed weekend.
Hello Madam Brend,

It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me, thanks to God I am doing fine in most of my deeds.

Well, thanks to God that we started our annual examination on Monday which are the exams of finalizing the Form three education year and we finished them today. In my consideration the exams were normal thus nor simple nor hard but I think it is because I a bit prepared myself for it. Today teacher has announced us that we are going to have a short break till 8th of next month for we didn't have one on September. So once we go to school on 8th there we will receive our reports on what we sow for all this term of study. My plan right now is to start preparing for Form four topics so as to reduce the luggage once the Form four study begin, though now we are going on with carrying out different projects or known to be research.

I am looking forward to hear from you. I am wishing you blessed weekend.
It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me, thanks to God I am doing fine in most of my deeds.

Well, thanks to God that we started our annual examination on Monday which are the exams of finalizing the Form three education year and we finished them today. In my consideration the exams were normal thus nor simple nor hard but I think it is because I a bit prepared myself for it. Today teacher has announced us that we are going to have a short break till 8th of next month for we didn't have one on September. So once we go to school on 8th there we will receive our reports on what we sow for all this term of study.

My plan right now is to start preparing for Form four topics so as to reduce the luggage once the Form four study begin, though now we are going on with carrying out different projects or known to be research.

I am looking forward to hear from you. I am wishing you blessed weekend.
Hello Madam Karen,
It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me I am doing fine and well in most of deeds. Today I wish to tell you about the facts about France that you perhaps didn't know about.
From having the world's oldest ever living human to being the world's most visited country, read about the most interesting facts about France.
Moving to France? Here are some interesting French facts to prepare you for life in France, or if you are already living in France, test how well you know the French!
France is the world's most popular tourist destination – some 83.7 million visitors arrived in France, according to the World Tourism Organization report published in 2014, making it the world's most-visited country.
France is the largest country in the EU, and known as 'the hexagon' – with an area of 551,000 sq km it's almost a fifth of the EU’s total area, and due to its six-sided shape France is sometimes referred to as l’hexagone. About a quarter is covered by forest; only Sweden and Finland have more.
Louis XIX was the king of France for just 20 minutes, the shortest ever reign – he ascended to the French throne in July 1830 after his father Charles X abdicated, and abdicated himself 20 minutes later in favour of his nephew, the Duke of Bordeaux. He shares this record with Crown Prince Luís Filipe, who technically became king of Portugal after his father was assassinated but died from a wound 20 minutes later.
Liberté, égalitié, fraternité meaning ‘liberty, equality and fraternity’ (or brotherhood) is the national motto of France – it first appeared around the time of the Revolution (1789–1799), and was written into the constitutions of 1946 and 1958. Today you’ll see it on coins, postage stamps and government logos often alongside ‘Marianne’ who symbolises the ‘triumph of the Republic’. The legal system in France is still largely based on the principles set down in Napoleon Bonaparte’s Code Civil after the revolution, in the 1800s.
France is one of the country that I love most and I wish to reach there once and I know I will one day.
Tell me abut the country you love most and why.
BE BLESSED
Hello Jonathan,
It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me I am doing fine and well in most of deeds. Today I wish to tell you about the facts about France that you perhaps didn't know about.

From having the world's oldest ever living human to being the world's most visited country, read about the most interesting facts about France.
Moving to France? Here are some interesting French facts to prepare you for life in France, or if you are already living in France, test how well you know the French!

France is the world's most popular tourist destination – some 83.7 million visitors arrived in France, according to the World Tourism Organization report published in 2014, making it the world's most-visited country.
France is the largest country in the EU, and known as 'the hexagon' – with an area of 551,000 sq km it's almost a fifth of the EU’s total area, and due to its six-sided shape France is sometimes referred to as l’hexagone. About a quarter is covered by forest; only Sweden and Finland have more.

Louis XIX was the king of France for just 20 minutes, the shortest ever reign – he ascended to the French throne in July 1830 after his father Charles X abdicated, and abdicated himself 20 minutes later in favour of his nephew, the Duke of Bordeaux. He shares this record with Crown Prince Luís Filipe, who technically became king of Portugal after his father was assassinated but died from a wound 20 minutes later.
Liberté, égalitié, fraternité meaning ‘liberty, equality and fraternity’ (or brotherhood) is the national motto of France – it first appeared around the time of the Revolution (1789–1799), and was written into the constitutions of 1946 and 1958. Today you’ll see it on coins, postage stamps and government logos often alongside ‘Marianne’ who symbolises the ‘triumph of the Republic’. The legal system in France is still largely based on the principles set down in Napoleon Bonaparte’s Code Civil after the revolution, in the 1800s.
France is one of the country that I love most and I wish to reach there once and I know I will one day.
Tell me abut the country you love most and why.
BE BLESSED
Hello Madam Ying,
It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me I am doing fine and well in most of deeds. Today I wish to tell you about the facts about France that you perhaps didn't know about.
From having the world's oldest ever living human to being the world's most visited country, read about the most interesting facts about France.
Moving to France? Here are some interesting French facts to prepare you for life in France, or if you are already living in France, test how well you know the French!
France is the world's most popular tourist destination – some 83.7 million visitors arrived in France, according to the World Tourism Organization report published in 2014, making it the world's most-visited country.
France is the largest country in the EU, and known as 'the hexagon' – with an area of 551,000 sq km it's almost a fifth of the EU’s total area, and due to its six-sided shape France is sometimes referred to as l’hexagone. About a quarter is covered by forest; only Sweden and Finland have more.
Louis XIX was the king of France for just 20 minutes, the shortest ever reign – he ascended to the French throne in July 1830 after his father Charles X abdicated, and abdicated himself 20 minutes later in favour of his nephew, the Duke of Bordeaux. He shares this record with Crown Prince Luís Filipe, who technically became king of Portugal after his father was assassinated but died from a wound 20 minutes later.
Liberté, égalitié, fraternité meaning ‘liberty, equality and fraternity’ (or brotherhood) is the national motto of France – it first appeared around the time of the Revolution (1789–1799), and was written into the constitutions of 1946 and 1958. Today you’ll see it on coins, postage stamps and government logos often alongside ‘Marianne’ who symbolises the ‘triumph of the Republic’. The legal system in France is still largely based on the principles set down in Napoleon Bonaparte’s Code Civil after the revolution, in the 1800s.
France is one of the country that I love most and I wish to reach there once and I know I will one day.
Tell me abut the country you love most and why.
BE BLESSED
Hello Madam Brend,
It is my hope that you are doing fine back to me I am doing fine and well in most of deeds. Today I wish to tell you about the facts about France that you perhaps didn't know about.
From having the world's oldest ever living human to being the world's most visited country, read about the most interesting facts about France.
Moving to France? Here are some interesting French facts to prepare you for life in France, or if you are already living in France, test how well you know the French!
France is the world's most popular tourist destination – some 83.7 million visitors arrived in France, according to the World Tourism Organization report published in 2014, making it the world's most-visited country.
France is the largest country in the EU, and known as 'the hexagon' – with an area of 551,000 sq km it's almost a fifth of the EU’s total area, and due to its six-sided shape France is sometimes referred to as l’hexagone. About a quarter is covered by forest; only Sweden and Finland have more.
Louis XIX was the king of France for just 20 minutes, the shortest ever reign – he ascended to the French throne in July 1830 after his father Charles X abdicated, and abdicated himself 20 minutes later in favour of his nephew, the Duke of Bordeaux. He shares this record with Crown Prince Luís Filipe, who technically became king of Portugal after his father was assassinated but died from a wound 20 minutes later.
Liberté, égalitié, fraternité meaning ‘liberty, equality and fraternity’ (or brotherhood) is the national motto of France – it first appeared around the time of the Revolution (1789–1799), and was written into the constitutions of 1946 and 1958. Today you’ll see it on coins, postage stamps and government logos often alongside ‘Marianne’ who symbolises the ‘triumph of the Republic’. The legal system in France is still largely based on the principles set down in Napoleon Bonaparte’s Code Civil after the revolution, in the 1800s.
France is one of the country that I love most and I wish to reach there once and I know I will one day.
Tell me abut the country you love most and why.
BE BLESSED
Hello Madam Judy,
Its my hope that you are doing fine back to me I am doing well in most of my deeds. Today I wish to tell you about the facts about France that you perhaps didn't know about.
From having the world's oldest ever living human to being the world's most visited country, read about the most interesting facts about France.
Moving to France? Here are some interesting French facts to prepare you for life in France, or if you are already living in France, test how well you know the French!
France is the world's most popular tourist destination – some 83.7 million visitors arrived in France, according to the World Tourism Organization report published in 2014, making it the world's most-visited country.
France is the largest country in the EU, and known as 'the hexagon' – with an area of 551,000 sq km it's almost a fifth of the EU’s total area, and due to its six-sided shape France is sometimes referred to as l’hexagone. About a quarter is covered by forest; only Sweden and Finland have more.
Louis XIX was the king of France for just 20 minutes, the shortest ever reign – he ascended to the French throne in July 1830 after his father Charles X abdicated, and abdicated himself 20 minutes later in favour of his nephew, the Duke of Bordeaux. He shares this record with Crown Prince Luís Filipe, who technically became king of Portugal after his father was assassinated but died from a wound 20 minutes later.
Liberté, égalitié, fraternité meaning ‘liberty, equality and fraternity’ (or brotherhood) is the national motto of France – it first appeared around the time of the Revolution (1789–1799), and was written into the constitutions of 1946 and 1958. Today you’ll see it on coins, postage stamps and government logos often alongside ‘Marianne’ who symbolises the ‘triumph of the Republic’. The legal system in France is still largely based on the principles set down in Napoleon Bonaparte’s Code Civil after the revolution, in the 1800s.
The French Army was the first to use camouflage in 1915 (World War I) – the word camouflage came from the French verb ‘to make up for the stage’. Guns and vehicles were painted by artists called camofleurs.
In France you can marry a dead person – under French law, in exceptional cases you can marry posthumously, as long as you can also prove that the deceased had the intention of marrying while alive and you receive permission from the French president. The most recent approved case was in 2017, when the partner of a gay policeman gunned down on Paris's Champs-Elysees by a jihadist was granted permission to marry his partner posthumously.
The French have produced a number of world-renown inventions: the 'father of canning' confectioner Nicolas Appert came up with the idea to use sealed glass jars placed in boiling water to preserve food in 1809, and the later use of tin cans was the idea of another Frenchman, Pierre Durand; the reading and writing system for the blind, braille, was developed by Louis Braille who was blinded as a child; physician René Laennec invented the stethoscope at a hospital in Paris in 1816, first discovered by rolling up paper into a tube; and Alexandre-Ferdinand Godefroy patented a contraption was the world's first hair dryer in 1888. The Montgolfier brothers Joseph and Etienne became pioneers of hot air flight after the world's first public display of an untethered hot air balloon in 1783. A less known fact is that the popular game Etch-a-Sketch was invented in the 1950s after French electrical technician André Cassagnes peeled a translucent transfer from a light switch plate and discovered his pencil marks remained on its underside, a result of the electrostatically charged metallic powder.
France was the first country in the world to ban supermarkets from throwing away or destroying unsold food – since February 2016, shops must donate wastage to food banks or charities.
About one million French people living near the border with Italy speak Italian – although French is the official language and the first language of 88 percent of the population, there are various indigenous regional dialects and languages, such as Alsacian, Basque, Breton, Catalan, Occitan and Flemish. On a larger scale, French is the second most spoken mother tongue in Europe, after German and before English, and is predicted to become number one by 2025 due to the country's high birth rate.

France is one of the country that I love most and I wish to reach there once and I know I will one day.
Tell me abut the country you love most and why.
BE BLESSED.
Hello Madam Alexandria,
Hopefully you are doing alright, back to me I am doing well in most of my deeds.
Well, today I wish to share with you about the 10 interesting facts about Mountain Kilimanjaro which in the Highest mountain in Africa which is found in Tanzania.
Rising majestically above the African plains, the 20,000-foot Mt. Kilimanjaro has beckoned to climbers since the first recorded summit in 1889. Here are 10 interesting facts to help inspire your own future summit:
1. Approximately 25,000 people attempt to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro annually. Approximately two-thirds are successful. Altitude-related problems is the most common reason climbers turn back.
2. South African Bernard Goosen twice scaled Mt. Kilimanjaro in a wheelchair. His first summit, in 2003, took nine days; his second, four years later, took only six. Born with cerebral palsy, Goosen used a modified wheelchair, mostly without assistance, to climb the mountain.
3. Shamsa Mwangunga, National Resources and Tourism minister of Tanzania, announced in 2008 that 4.8 million indigenous trees will be planted around the base of the mountain, helping prevent soil erosion and protect water sources.
4. The mountain’s snow caps are diminishing, having lost more than 80 percent of their mass since 1912. In fact, they may be completely ice free within the next 20 years, according to scientists.
5. The fasted verified ascent of Mt. Kilimanjaro occurred in 2001 when Italian Bruno Brunod summitted Uhuru Peak in 5 hours 38 minutes 40 seconds. The fastest roundtrip was accomplished in 2004, when local guide Simon Mtuy went up and down the mountain in 8:27.
6. Almost every kind of ecological system is found on the mountain: cultivated land, rain forest, heath, moorland, alpine desert and an arctic summit.
7. The oldest person ever to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro was 87-year-old Frenchman Valtee Daniel.
8. Nearly every climber who has summitted Uhuru Peak, the highest summit on Kibo’s crater rim, has recorded his or her thoughts about the accomplishment in a book stored in a wooden box at the top.
9. Kilimanjaro has three volcanic cones, Mawenzi, Shira and Kibo. Mawenzi and Shira are extinct but Kibo, the highest peak, is dormant and could erupt again. The most recent activity was about 200 years ago; the last major eruption was 360,000 years ago.
10. Mount Kilimanjaro is the tallest mountain on the African continent and the highest free-standing mountain in the world.
Mountain Kilimanjaro is very essential part of Tanzania and it is one of the thing that brings pride to Tanzania.
I am looking forward to hear from you about the pride of your country.
BE BLESSED.
Hello Madam Ying,
Hopefully you are doing alright, back to me I am doing well in most of my deeds.
Well, today I wish to share with you about the 10 interesting facts about Mountain Kilimanjaro which in the Highest mountain in Africa which is found in Tanzania.
Rising majestically above the African plains, the 20,000-foot Mt. Kilimanjaro has beckoned to climbers since the first recorded summit in 1889. Here are 10 interesting facts to help inspire your own future summit:
1. Approximately 25,000 people attempt to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro annually. Approximately two-thirds are successful. Altitude-related problems is the most common reason climbers turn back.
2. South African Bernard Goosen twice scaled Mt. Kilimanjaro in a wheelchair. His first summit, in 2003, took nine days; his second, four years later, took only six. Born with cerebral palsy, Goosen used a modified wheelchair, mostly without assistance, to climb the mountain.
3. Shamsa Mwangunga, National Resources and Tourism minister of Tanzania, announced in 2008 that 4.8 million indigenous trees will be planted around the base of the mountain, helping prevent soil erosion and protect water sources.
4. The mountain’s snow caps are diminishing, having lost more than 80 percent of their mass since 1912. In fact, they may be completely ice free within the next 20 years, according to scientists.
5. The fasted verified ascent of Mt. Kilimanjaro occurred in 2001 when Italian Bruno Brunod summitted Uhuru Peak in 5 hours 38 minutes 40 seconds. The fastest roundtrip was accomplished in 2004, when local guide Simon Mtuy went up and down the mountain in 8:27.
6. Almost every kind of ecological system is found on the mountain: cultivated land, rain forest, heath, moorland, alpine desert and an arctic summit.
7. The oldest person ever to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro was 87-year-old Frenchman Valtee Daniel.
8. Nearly every climber who has summitted Uhuru Peak, the highest summit on Kibo’s crater rim, has recorded his or her thoughts about the accomplishment in a book stored in a wooden box at the top.
9. Kilimanjaro has three volcanic cones, Mawenzi, Shira and Kibo. Mawenzi and Shira are extinct but Kibo, the highest peak, is dormant and could erupt again. The most recent activity was about 200 years ago; the last major eruption was 360,000 years ago.
10. Mount Kilimanjaro is the tallest mountain on the African continent and the highest free-standing mountain in the world.
Mountain Kilimanjaro is very essential part of Tanzania and it is one of the thing that brings pride to Tanzania.
I am looking forward to hear from you about the pride of your country.
BE BLESSED.
Hello Jonathan,
Hopefully you are doing alright, back to me I am doing well in most of my deeds.
Well, today I wish to share with you about the 10 interesting facts about Mountain Kilimanjaro which in the Highest mountain in Africa which is found in Tanzania.
Rising majestically above the African plains, the 20,000-foot Mt. Kilimanjaro has beckoned to climbers since the first recorded summit in 1889. Here are 10 interesting facts to help inspire your own future summit:
1. Approximately 25,000 people attempt to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro annually. Approximately two-thirds are successful. Altitude-related problems is the most common reason climbers turn back.
2. South African Bernard Goosen twice scaled Mt. Kilimanjaro in a wheelchair. His first summit, in 2003, took nine days; his second, four years later, took only six. Born with cerebral palsy, Goosen used a modified wheelchair, mostly without assistance, to climb the mountain.
3. Shamsa Mwangunga, National Resources and Tourism minister of Tanzania, announced in 2008 that 4.8 million indigenous trees will be planted around the base of the mountain, helping prevent soil erosion and protect water sources.
4. The mountain’s snow caps are diminishing, having lost more than 80 percent of their mass since 1912. In fact, they may be completely ice free within the next 20 years, according to scientists.
5. The fasted verified ascent of Mt. Kilimanjaro occurred in 2001 when Italian Bruno Brunod summitted Uhuru Peak in 5 hours 38 minutes 40 seconds. The fastest roundtrip was accomplished in 2004, when local guide Simon Mtuy went up and down the mountain in 8:27.
6. Almost every kind of ecological system is found on the mountain: cultivated land, rain forest, heath, moorland, alpine desert and an arctic summit.
7. The oldest person ever to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro was 87-year-old Frenchman Valtee Daniel.
8. Nearly every climber who has summitted Uhuru Peak, the highest summit on Kibo’s crater rim, has recorded his or her thoughts about the accomplishment in a book stored in a wooden box at the top.
9. Kilimanjaro has three volcanic cones, Mawenzi, Shira and Kibo. Mawenzi and Shira are extinct but Kibo, the highest peak, is dormant and could erupt again. The most recent activity was about 200 years ago; the last major eruption was 360,000 years ago.
10. Mount Kilimanjaro is the tallest mountain on the African continent and the highest free-standing mountain in the world.
Mountain Kilimanjaro is very essential part of Tanzania and it is one of the thing that brings pride to Tanzania.
I am looking forward to hear from you about the pride of your country.
BE BLESSED.
Hello Hunter,
Hopefully you are doing alright, back to me I am doing well in most of my deeds.
Well, today I wish to share with you about the 10 interesting facts about Mountain Kilimanjaro which in the Highest mountain in Africa which is found in Tanzania.
Rising majestically above the African plains, the 20,000-foot Mt. Kilimanjaro has beckoned to climbers since the first recorded summit in 1889. Here are 10 interesting facts to help inspire your own future summit:
1. Approximately 25,000 people attempt to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro annually. Approximately two-thirds are successful. Altitude-related problems is the most common reason climbers turn back.
2. South African Bernard Goosen twice scaled Mt. Kilimanjaro in a wheelchair. His first summit, in 2003, took nine days; his second, four years later, took only six. Born with cerebral palsy, Goosen used a modified wheelchair, mostly without assistance, to climb the mountain.
3. Shamsa Mwangunga, National Resources and Tourism minister of Tanzania, announced in 2008 that 4.8 million indigenous trees will be planted around the base of the mountain, helping prevent soil erosion and protect water sources.
4. The mountain’s snow caps are diminishing, having lost more than 80 percent of their mass since 1912. In fact, they may be completely ice free within the next 20 years, according to scientists.
5. The fasted verified ascent of Mt. Kilimanjaro occurred in 2001 when Italian Bruno Brunod summitted Uhuru Peak in 5 hours 38 minutes 40 seconds. The fastest roundtrip was accomplished in 2004, when local guide Simon Mtuy went up and down the mountain in 8:27.
6. Almost every kind of ecological system is found on the mountain: cultivated land, rain forest, heath, moorland, alpine desert and an arctic summit.
7. The oldest person ever to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro was 87-year-old Frenchman Valtee Daniel.
8. Nearly every climber who has summitted Uhuru Peak, the highest summit on Kibo’s crater rim, has recorded his or her thoughts about the accomplishment in a book stored in a wooden box at the top.
9. Kilimanjaro has three volcanic cones, Mawenzi, Shira and Kibo. Mawenzi and Shira are extinct but Kibo, the highest peak, is dormant and could erupt again. The most recent activity was about 200 years ago; the last major eruption was 360,000 years ago.
10. Mount Kilimanjaro is the tallest mountain on the African continent and the highest free-standing mountain in the world.
Mountain Kilimanjaro is very essential part of Tanzania and it is one of the thing that brings pride to Tanzania.
I am looking forward to hear from you about the pride of your country.
BE BLESSED.

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