Story
Thanks for visiting our 'SOS Children's Villages' fundraising page.
Andy Thomson and Nora McGoldrick are driving to The Gambia overland. We are leaving on the 26th of December 2010 and hope to take around 3-4 weeks. At the end of the trip we are donating our trusty Jeep Cherokee and equipment to be sold at auction and the proceeds will also go to charity. All the money donated here goes directly to 'SOS Children’s Villages' as we are buying, equipping, fuelling and repairing the vehicle out of our own pockets. You can keep up to date with our progress on this website
or email us at andy@tropicblunder.com or nora@tropicblunder.com
'SOS Children's Villages' are the world's largest orphan charity.
You can find more information about SOS Children's villages work on their website
Their work in The Gambia
At present they support over 23,000 people in The Gambia through two SOS Children’s Villages, one SOS Youth Home, two SOS Nursery Schools, two SOS Schools, one SOS Vocational Training Centre, one SOS Family Strengthening Programme and one SOS Medical Centre.
They started their work in the Gambia in 1981 with a community in Bakoteh, a short distance from the town of Serrakunda and about 10 miles from the capital, Banjul. The 12 family houses, built in the local style and surrounded by flowers, shrubs and trees, are home to around 120 children and their SOS mothers. There is also an SOS Nursery, used by local children as well as children from the Village, and an SOS Primary and Secondary School, which are now run by the national education authority.
The main aim of the SOS Vocational Training Centre Bakoteh is to pass on to young people knowledge and experience that will enable them to run their own businesses and lead independent lives. They specialise in three areas: carpentry/woodwork, car mechanics, and metal work/tool making. Five SOS Youth Homes provide accommodation for young people from SOS Children's Villages in neighbouring countries who come here for training. The centre also operates as a production and service unit supplying the general public, making it to some extent self-sufficient.
A shortage of medical facilities in the area led to the establishment of an SOS Mother and Child Clinic in 1997, which provides medical care and counselling especially for pregnant women and mothers with small children. An ambulance is available to transport emergency cases. The clinic is one of Gambia's most important medical facilities providing services and assistance to around 20,000 people in the locality each year.
There is also a Family Strengthening Programme in Bakoteh which supports over 300 community children and their families with food, healthcare, education costs, and provides income-generating opportunities for caregivers. This programme helps to prevent child abandonment.
They set up a Girls’ Youth Home in 2006 to support young girls forced into commercial sex work due to economic hardship and who are as a result outcast from society. SOS Children began this project, which has now been handed over to the Department of Social Welfare.
A second SOS Children's Village opened in Basse in the east of the country in 2007, thanks to the support of SOS supporters in the UK! There are 12 family homes at the Village, which also has a large playground and lots grassy areas for the children to run around in. The SOS Nursery offers a pre-school education to 100 little children, and over 400 children attend the SOS Primary School. A Family Strengthening Programme was started in Basse in March 2010.
Basse is located on a trucker route between northern and southern Senegal; the HIV/AIDS rate is increasing as a result, as are the numbers of orphans and abandoned children
www.soschildrensvillages.org.uk
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So please sponsor us now!
Thank you
Andy Thomson and Nora McGoldrick
Team Tropicblunder
“If we’d known then what we know now we might never have set off......”
Austin Vince, Mondo Enduro
