Kids’ grassroots emergency relief campaign a success. A Thank you!
“I saw it was important to help because right now, the Bududa people cannot work and even their gardens were destroyed by the mudslides and they have no where to sleep, that is why I have got the strength to move around the community looking for help for those people,” Rachael, Senior 2
Greetings friends! A few weeks ago, massive landslides washed away villages in eastern Uganda leaving hundreds of people in desperate need. URF stepped up to help, launching a grassroots campaign, school children in south western Uganda went door-to-door collecting corn and beans. In a week, they collected 1,000kgs of corn. Our Kampala young professionals chapter collected cloths. On the global front, we raised $2,800 in two weeks. Thanks to all of you who responded generously and contributed in various ways. Many thanks to radio Buddu, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and UNAA Times for spreading the word. Below is what URF delivered to the victims of the landslides with help of your donations:
- 1,000kg of corn flour
- 150 blankets
- 72 saucepans
- 30 dozens of cups
- 30 dozens of plates
- 50 basins
- 40 jerrycans
- 8 boxes of soap
- 10 cartons of salt
- Extra $200 was donated to an area orphanage, Bunabumali, which took five children after the mudslides. In addition, some of the funds were use for transporting the supplies.
Pictures from the camps are posted here – in blue t-shirts are URF team who delivered the supplies http://picasaweb.google.com/nakhokhoe/BududaLatestPicturesMarch2010#
Why We Help? Student Testimonies
Our goal was to empower local people to help each other. Teachers and students got deeply involved in the campaign and they all sacrificed a day without studying, feeling that their studies could not help much unless they have helped in raising resources to help these people. Students in sharing their experience and testimonies, they said it was passion for the suffering, that made them go out to search for help for the Bududa and students had this to say.
voluntary service to those people, so we decided to move in villages asking help from people, even the community felt very sorry and they massively provided whatever they had and their response was very good in that they gave us food, clothes and money. I felt it was very important to help those people because next time it might be us in problems and they will help us, I call upon other communities to help in relief of Buduuda, I also thank Uganda Rural Fund in brightening my future by offering and sponsoring my Education through Hope integrated academy and I’m now in Senior three”. Nakato Rose S.3















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