Hope For The Nations


Learn more about this Program Program: CHILDREN IN EXTREME POVERTY

All of the children that Hope for the Nations works with are 'at risk' because of the effects of extreme poverty. Poverty impacts children because it hurts families. There are a number of ways in which it does this.

Poverty is a barrier to accessing health services. HIV/AIDS, malaria and TB affect millions of parents each year; without access to treatment, parents are unable to get well, earn a living or care for their children. Sometimes this means that their children are orphaned.

Poverty impacts a family's ability to provide food, shelter and education for all of their family members. In extreme poverty conditions, families may send their children to work rather than to school; in the worst scenario, children are employed in the worst forms of labour or parents sell their children into the trafficking network.

Poverty, in a variety of ways, feeds the cycle of violence in countries that are caught in conflict. Not only does this violence kill parents and children, it also causes major upheaval in the lives of families and communities,  destroying family assets and future opportunities.

Without strategic interventions, poverty tends to be passed from one generation to another. Hope for the Nations believes that by intervening in the lives of the children who are most disadvantaged by poverty - orphans and vulnerable children - we can begin the process of change and the cycle of poverty can be broken. "Today's orphans" can be "tomorrow's leaders".

 

 

Funds Raised: $1,355.00 CAD
Project
KENYA - Nairobi: Hope Gateway School, Sinai Slum

Project Image

Sinai slum in Nairobi hosts a population of over 200,000 men, women and children. Because the population is squatting (living there illegally), there are no public schools. There are a few private schools in the slum but most families cannot afford the school fees at these schools.

Hope Gateway School is located in the center of Sinai slum and is run by a Kenyan couple, Laz and Liz, who are committed to providing education for the children in their community. Life outside the walls of this school is desperate and dirty, but inside, life is peaceful and productive.

The school began in 2005 with kindergarten and grades 1 and 2. Today, just 5 years later, there are 217 children at the school with classes from nursery to grade 5! Each child receives 2 meals a day at the school, instruction and a school uniform; students at the school are not required to pay any fees. The curriculum at the school is approved by the Kenyan government, the children write state exams at the end of each school year, and thanks to their hard work and excellent teachers, the students' achievements have been great!

And the impact of Hope Gateway School is not limited to the students; the school has also had a positive effect on the lives of the students' families and community, creating employment, opportunities and hope.

Hope for the Nations is grateful for the ongoing support provided for this project by the Dutch NGO, Stiching Save.




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  • lazarus &elizabeth

    lazarus &elizabeth (on February 10, 2010) wrote:

    i read thru all the comments that the teachers and friends have made , and it makes me more brave for i am so encouranged that hope gate way schools is not my dream , but IT IS OUR DREAM- Together we can make this come true and hope gateway be a spring of hope to the kids of the slum and their families. THANK YOU SO M,UCH THAT YOU ARE THERE WITH US , WE FEEL WARM HERE AT HOPE GATEWAY SCHOOLS. God bless you richly.
    laz& liz -kenya


  • Dennis Dixon

    Dennis Dixon (on January 23, 2010) wrote:

    Dan, thank you for your tireless efforts for the Hope for the Nations projects! We hope to be able to support your efforts on an ongoing basis.


  • lazarus &elizabeth

    lazarus &elizabeth (on January 15, 2010) wrote:

    my photo is coming on soon with liz


  • lazarus &elizabeth

    lazarus &elizabeth (on January 15, 2010) wrote:

    Dan , when i sit down with the kids of sinai hope gate-way schools and they say their dreams of becoming ; doctors, pilots and other professionals, this is the greatest joy that them that once were doomed to be child mothers and gangsters and slaves of a kind due to the poverty that sorrounds them, are with hope as any other children of the rich; THANKS TO YOUR PROGRAMME WITH HOPE FOR THE NATIONS, may we let this hope live all through with these kids dream. will keep you updated.


  • Lisa Tremblay

    Lisa Tremblay (on January 15, 2010) wrote:

    Educators helping educate