Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.

by Makindu Children's Program
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Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.
Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.
Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.
Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.
Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.
Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.
Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.
Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.
Feed 1,800 orphaned children in rural Kenya.

Project Report | May 17, 2016
Got goat milk?

By Diana Richardson | Executive Director

Sofia
Sofia

Sofia, aged 4, and Omondi, aged 7, are siblings living with their impoverished elderly grandmother, two other siblings and four cousins in a small mud hut. Omondi and two cousins are HIV+. The grandmother does her best to provide basic provisions by selling fruit at the local market. Sofia and Omondi are enrolled in the Makindu Children's Program and receive a daily meal at the Makindu Children's Centre of either vitamin-enriched porridge or a plate of rice, beans and supplemental fresh organic vegetables grown at the Centre's shamba (farm/garden plot). These daily meals are key in keeping the the kids healthy and well-nourished, and enable Omondi to adhere well to his anti-retroviral medications for his HIV. These daily meals for Sofia and Omondi at the Centre also enable the grandmother to better afford the food necessary to feed her other grandkids that are not enrolled in the Program.

Recently, some of the families in the Program received a goat. Sofia and Omondi's family was one such lucky recipient. The goat is now providing the entire family with much-needed milk on a daily basis, ensuring each member of the family gets the calcium so critical to the healthy bone development for the children and bone health for the elderly grandmother. The family is hoping to breed the goat, and plans to sell the goat kid for supplemental income for basic needs. The family that purchases the kid goat will then also have the critical calcium and nutritional benefits of daily goat milk, thereby strengthening the health not only of that family, but of the entire community.

One of Sofia and Omondi's older cousins is enrolled in a goat cheese making class, paid for and sponsored by Makindu Children's Program. Making and selling cheese will help supplement the family's income and further provide tasty nutritious dairy so often lacking in the diets of poverty stricken children and adults in rural Kenya.

Please help us continue to provide food, nutrition, goats and economic opportunity to hundreds of desperate families in the Makindu region plagued by the AIDS pandemic. Health begins with daily nutrition. 

Omondi
Omondi

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Organization Information

Makindu Children's Program

Location: Eugene, OR - USA
Website:
Facebook: Facebook Page
Twitter: @MCPkenya
Project Leader:
first764237 last764237
United States

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