Melon Orphanage Blog

Saturday, April 18, 2009

GRATEFUL HEARTS


If one has been in Melon, it is always something notable that you can easily identify a child by the outfit, because unfortunately there are children with one dress or pair of trousers that they wear throughout the term.

We are always amazed on how children respond in very appreciative ways when we give them solicited clothes, they are always very happy to receive outfits which they immediately wear on receiving.

We are very happy when we are able to solicit clothes and give to the children.

They following are pictures of children receiving some clothes donated by friends.





Beatrice Mute the Bishops wife giving clothes to the children. Sometimes its difficult to decide who will get which clothe because they all deserve and want to have at least one pair of short, trouser or dress.









Dolphin Awino cannot resist the urge to try out her new pair of trouser immediately she received it.





















Mary Muthoni and Melvin Keziah are lucky to have gotten each clothing and one can see the joy in their faces.














Whether it’s a pair of trouser, dress or even glove melon children are always happy for what they receive.











Saturday, April 11, 2009

EASTER GREETINGS AND MELON UPDATE



We take this opportunity to wish all our Melon friends a happy Easter holiday.We are happy with the progress melon has had since our last posting which was last year, when we had a lot of crisis in our country. We take this opportunity to thank all who headed to our cry and assisted us in the turmoil times.


We are happy for the harmony we are now enjoying in Melon though we must

say that many of the melon children were affected, and it was

so sad for me when I was putting up some profiles for the children and realized there are now so many children with single parents due to the post election violence.

We will not dwell in the past, it’s gone and we don’t expect such times again, it affected much in the country and Melon, since then we have not been having foreign volunteers come continually as they used to come, but we are hoping they will start coming.

We have had much going on in Melon and I will highlight on some progress and also downfalls we have had so far.

To begin with, academically we have had a good continuing education procedure in that we have had volunteer teachers from melon neighboring community, offer themselves to come

and volunteer in Melon ,we currently have 15 teachers who have dedicated their time to be with the children and teach them accordingly.

We have had three subordinate staff two assisting in the kitchen and one assist in management.


We have been able to maintain three hundred children and also have had twenty children who come to melon for their meals and go to government schools, the children who go from Melon have had impressing results in their posted government schools and this has really encouraged us when we realize how bright the children are.

Something good and encouraging is that this year we have had one of our children in Melon and the first one joining high school,


Mary Andiego 14 years old is a bright girl who joined melon in 2005.Mary has two sisters Filda and Sharon, and one brother Norbert .They stay with the aunt and all of them are in Melon.

In 2006 Mary was sponsored by two volunteers Clare and Lindsey and she joine

d the government school in standard six, she did her best while in school and became a good icon for other children in Melon.

In 2008 Mary sat for the Kenya Certificate of Primary education which she passed well and received admission at Maombi Girls Secondary school in Nakuru.Its a boarding school which her sponsors Clare and Lindsey are continuing sponsoring her.


It was great joy for Mary and Melon when she joined high school. It was clear on her first day in secondary school that Mary is one of the children in melon who is excited to have the opportunity to have education by being sponsored.


We really thank her sponsors Clare and Lindsey for the golden chance they have given Mary and I know she will live to remember them. Let us also take this opportunity to request others to take interest in sponsoring children knowing they will be transforming the children’s lives.

Mary joining high school has been such a great encouragement to us when we see the trend Melon children look forward to.

We thank all those who have been greatly part of us just to mention Mary Beth, Ian Swinton, Daniel Voshart, Andy Milner, Abion, Mrs. Becky, Clare and Lindsey, Emma Silker, Rosina, Len Batty, and others who have seen us through difficult times and have continually been there for Melon by giving donations of food, stationery and also through others melon children can now correspond with children in UK and get to learn more about their school and country differences.

We are happy with the few achievement we have attained, however we have also had some downfalls one being, when we had volunteers coming they were able to bring us stationery and teaching materials that really assisted us, now since they seized coming we have a shortage of stationery.

We have also had a big challenge on food they has been a great problem of food in the country something that has also affected Melon since initially the government has been donating relief food but since the shortage of food was experienced we have had no food being given to Melon at all, this has left us a big challenge of feeding the children and we must say that the children have not been receiving enough food something that has kept us so uncomfortable.

However these downfalls have not distracted us from our chore mission of looking after the dear children entrusted to us. We have been doing our best and will always do our best to fully care for them.

Thank you for taking your time to go through our update and keep on looking for more detailed updates.

Once more we take this time to wish all the melon friends Happy Easter Holiday we Love you and are happy to have friends like you.

Happy Easter!!




Monday, April 28, 2008

Many Homes of Melon Children's Guardians Destroyed


The recent political unrest in the Nakuru area has resulted in the destruction of many homes. A number of the children of the Melon Orphanage were affected when the homes of their guardians were simply in the path of the fighting. The orphanage building is not suitable for overnight accommodations, so the children stay in homes of guardians. Now, many children are living in camps like the one shown in this picture.

Help is needed to provide for the children of the orphanage. Please give what you can. The only fees taken out of your donations are for bank funds transfer fees. Thank you.

Friday, February 1, 2008

Kenya's parties agree to stop violence

By Duncan Miriri

Kenya's feuding parties agreed on Friday to a framework for talks to resolve a violent political crisis, in which some 850 people have died, within 15 days, former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan said.

The two sides, at odds since a December 27 election returned President Mwai Kibaki to power in a vote opposition challenger Raila Odinga says he rigged, said they had agreed only a skeleton model for talks but hoped to make progress quickly.

Annan said they would discuss stopping ethnically motivated killings, how to deliver humanitarian aid to the affected and how to resolve the immediate political crisis before tackling a longer term solution, which could take a year.

"The first is to take immediate action to stop the violence," Annan, who is heading the mediation, told reporters.

"But more importantly, the parties agreed that the first three items could be handled and resolved within 7 to 15 days."

Talks are to resume on Monday. Senior opposition official Musalia Mudavadi said they two sides agreed to urge supporters to end the violence, in which rival tribes are locked into a cycle of killings and lootings.

"We ... agreed on the agenda items ... We have made substantial progress on the first agenda item ... We are calling on the public to disband any illegal militia," he said.

Kenya's Justice Minister Martha Karua agreed and said steps would be taken to protect life and property after post-poll protests descended into bloodshed.

Annan's announcement followed a visit by his successor, U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon, to give clout to diplomatic efforts.

Ban met negotiating teams for Kibaki and Odinga trying to reach a deal to end the crisis in what had been one of the continent's more stable nations and strongest economies.
"What is important at this time is to maintain peace and security," he told reporters. "The killing must stop."

But even as he spoke, violence continued in flashpoints all over western Kenya.
"I saw around 20 torched houses including shops and two policemen with arrow wounds," said a local journalist who had visited the area and did not want to be named.

"At least 10 people have died from both sides."

Leaders at an African Union summit in Ethiopia want urgent action. Ban flew in from there for a one-day visit to Kenya.

"You have lost already too much in terms of national image, economic interest," he said.
More than 300,000 Kenyans are living as refugees.

Kibaki says he is Kenya's elected leader but international observers said the count was so chaotic it was impossible to tell who won.

KIBAKI BLAMES RIVALS
At a meeting of an east African regional grouping, Kibaki made provocative statement accusing his rivals of instigating the bloodshed and telling them again to challenge his disputed re-election in court.

"Regrettably, although the election results reflected the will of the majority of Kenyans, the leaders in the opposition instigated a campaign of civil unrest," he said.

Odinga says he would not get a fair hearing in court because the judiciary is biased toward Kibaki, although the opposition has challenged legislative elections in the courts.

The unrest has taken the lid off decades-old divisions between tribal groupings over land, wealth and power, dating from British colonial rule and stoked by Kenyan politicians during 44 years of independence.

The United States and European countries have pledged their support for Annan's mediation efforts. Donors have said aid programs to Kenya are under review.

Fresh protests, in which witnesses said at least two people were killed, broke out on Thursday after a police officer in the Rift Valley town of Eldoret shot dead an opposition legislator.
He was the second killed in a week.

The officer who fatally shot the legislator and also a female police officer with him, appeared in court on Friday.

Police have said they are treating the killing as a "crime of passion," but Odinga again called it a politically-motivated assassination when he viewed the legislator's body at a Nairobi mortuary on Friday.

Soldiers fired into the air to disperse angry mobs in Eldoret after the shooting killing. Hospital sources said at least 20 people were wounded in the fighting.

(Additional reporting by Andrew Cawthorne, Bryson Hull and Tim Cocks in Nairobi, David Lewis in Eldoret, Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing by Michael Winfrey)

For special coverage from Reuters Africa Web site see:
http://africa.reuters.com/elections/kenya/

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

KICKING AMID TENSION IN KENYA


As you may have heard from the media there are lot of riots happening in almost all towns of Kenya.This is due to the elections that took place in the country a few days ago.

I am glad to say that Melon is doing o key despite the fact that it is located in one of the mostly affected place, the reason being that it is located in the slums.

The children are also fine and everything is being done to confirm there security even when at home.

We therefore request for your prayers in this trying moments of Kenya.We will keep you informed in case of anything but as per now we are fine and kicking.

Friday, December 21, 2007

MERRY CHRISTMAS

As the Melon fraternity we are very excited to grace our first news post with good news that have made the closing of our year elegant, and this is a sign of the good things we expect in the future,

Early this month, melon children had the grand opportunity to participate in a children’s talent showcase that was organized by the Nakuru Children’s Home Network, The function took place in Nakuru town. In the competition talent showcase the children were to prepare for activities of all round that is creativity, songs, dances, fashion runway and broadcasting, in all this events melon had such gorgeous participants.

In our prior preparations for the event we had a lot of children who had come up to show on their different talents and honestly, all proved to have such great talents and it’s only due to the limited number of participants we had to present, and hence we had to forward a list of twenty five participants.

It was on 06\12\07 when the awaited occasion took place, the stage was set and the many children from different homes in Nakuru were there for the showcase.

Out of the preparations we had with the children we were optimistic of their victory and as we expected melon got a lot of trophies from the various events something good was that, whenever melon children presented their items there was such huge applause from the spectators since the children truly had talents to showcase.

This has been such a nice ending of the year for melon considering the many downfalls we have had in the cause of the year.

We were very excited for the victory the children attained being their first competition. We are left to believe this was an event ushering us to a better year with better things, and as you can see we now have a website something that we have been eagerly longing for and it has eventually come to being, We are very grateful for Tim who has helped us take such a broad step, we are also very thankful to all our friends, you have all contributed to our joy this year.

We take this opportunity as the melon fraternity to wish you all a merry Christmas and a prosperous new year, we are happy to have friends like you.

MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!



Thursday, December 13, 2007

New Website

We folks at Matthews, Young - Management Consulting are enjoying developing the Website for such a worthy cause, and we are looking forward to Bishop Joseph Mute and James Kagema posting news from the Orphanage here on this blog site.

"A Melon Always Ripens"