Friday, 26 September 2014

Visit to TY Junior Academy, Teyateyaneng, Lesotho by Penarth and District Lesotho Trust and friends, August 2014.

Visit to TY Junior Academy, Teyateyaneng, Lesotho by Penarth and District Lesotho Trust and friends,   August 2014.

 Written by Judith Forbes
 

Godfrey Kakande is a big man with an even bigger heart.  He needs a big heart because he has poured into it the lives and welfare of 130 children, mainly orphans, from aged 4 to 15+.  He has built, against all odds, a refuge, a home, a school to keep these children safe and to give them a future.  Godfrey’s school stands on a rock, metaphorically and figuratively.  It is a sloping tract of land with little vegetation or means of cultivation but it is now, thanks the help of Penarth and District Lesotho Trust (PADLT) his.  He owns the deeds to the land and this is important because twice before he has built a school only to be thrown out, with all of the children, when the land was claimed for another use.  So the land on which he has built the school slopes madly, the classrooms have uneven floors ,the ‘kitchen’ is falling down and it is open to all weathers but it is, for the time being, secure.  I recently had the privilege of travelling with members of PADLT and others, to TY Junior Academy where we spent 9 days among the children, doing what we could to improve the environment a little. 


We found there happy, joyful, well fed and extremely well educated (more about that later) children.  Godfrey employs staff who work tirelessly to improve the education and welfare of the children in their charge.  Godfrey has rules and a vision and the staff employed here sign up to that vision, otherwise it would not work.  They have to be prepared to bring their hearts not just their qualifications because this is no ordinary school. Beyond their teaching duties the staff apply themselves diligently to every task whether cutting up oranges on the BBQ day, helping us cover hundreds of books in the library or providing us with cups of tea. With virtually no resources Godfrey and his staff have turned TY Junior Academy in to one of the highest performing junior schools in Lesotho and as a result some local residents pay to send their children to this school where the children often sit on the floor and where there are big gaps between one classroom and the next.    
 The latter conditions struck two of members as a task that could be achieved and with great energy, commitment and stamina Max and Nathan set about renovating the classroom block.  By the end of the week, with the help of the older boys in the school and two local lads who appreciated the addition of sausages snaffled from the breakfast table to the wages, they laid new concrete floors and built partitions between the classrooms. The last day saw us painting the walls and partitions and painting on proper blackboards in each classroom. They were transformed.



The library is a new addition to the school.  With the help of grants and fund raising PADLT have supplied the library with the latest teaching books. The previous visiting group (two weeks before) set up and catalogued the library and we set about covering every book with plastic to preserve them.  We worked long hours doing this and were grateful for the staff giving up their free time to help. Whilst we were working in the library many of the children came in, took a book and sat quietly reading before diligently placing the books back on the correct shelf.  When Godfrey makes rules everyone respects them.
  

When there was free time the children gathered around us.  The older ones had endless questions, about our lives, our families, where we had been, what we had seen, done.  What our lives were like.  The little ones just wanted a cuddle or to hold hands or play with us.  They all loved having their pictures taken, or taking ‘selfies’ or taking pictures of us and they always wanted to see the result.

During the week several other projects were undertaken.  Many of the children inspired by Esme coloured or painted Swallows for a project started by Dolen Cymru and inspired by the fact that Swallows migrate from Wales to Lesotho every year.  We had taken many paints and crayons with us and the children loved doing the drawing. Some of the swallows have been brought back to be placed in an exhibition and others now adorn an otherwise bare classroom in TYJA.
Some of our number, by request from the teachers, taught the children to knit, a task they applied themselves to so diligently that they refused to take any breaks and by the end of the morning many of them could cast on, cast off, increase, decrease and knit plain and purl.  Not bad for one morning’s work.  The teachers promised to carry on with that skill.  Two of us, ex-teachers, introduced the staff to the Jolly Phonics books and Pat demonstrated a Phonics lesson.  We held reading group with the smaller children and Peter taught a huge group of mainly boys, how to hold and strum a guitar.

Meanwhile Lesley and Peter were visiting or being visited by vast numbers of people they had linked with on previous visits.  Two of our number, health professionals, visited the hospital to reinforce links there.  We also took a day off to visit Maseru and the Kome Caves, a great day out.  The country side it fairly barren but also beautiful with wide plains and great purple mountain ranges.  We were welcomed everywhere we went with warmth.  Everyone waved at us, everyone smiled.

Godrey Kakande and the TY Junior Academy is an inspiration.  There is much more to be done and PADLT are committed to continue to fund more projects.  They need a big hall where the children can gather, where they can shelter on extremely wet or cold days.  At present they have only the classrooms or if it is extremely cold, their beds.  They definitely need improved cooking facilities.  We were amazed at what the cooks can achieve in the conditions they work in. Godfrey is in the process of building a separate dormitory for the older boys.


There is another concern. Godfrey, despite a dedicated staff is only one man. TY Junior Academy is Godfrey.  He lives and breathes it and has very little time to himself.  PADLT is committed to working with him to plan for the long-term future.  The future of this school and of the children within it must be assured.



1 comment:

  1. MY NAME IS HLOMPHO MOKIBA.I Attended school at TJA from grade4-6. i now attend school AT MSDA.I LOVE YOU GUYS AND I MISS YOU

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