Friday 27 September 2013

Second fundraiser

It is not doing the things we like to do, but liking the things we have to do that makes life blessed.- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 

Hello Interactors!
Our dear friend Josephine was able to go to her checkup with the money we raised and her results came back today. It turns out that she had been straining her right leg too much and it would be vital for her to have a walking stick/single crutch in possession. Also, her right hip joint has dug 4cm into the pelvis thereby causing her pain and discomfort.
So in order to help her with her situation, the KISU interact club is aiming to raise over 300,000 Ugx in our second fundraiser to cover for her medication, crutches and custom-made 4cm platform shoes. 
Fortuanately, the head of our science department has lent us a helping hand. Every year, the science department hosts what is known as "mole day" on October 23rd. On this day this year, many activities will be carried out (like simple games for primary school-pupils) and a bake sale. Our generous head has decided to donate all the profit from the bakesale towards Josephine's well-being. We will be updating you with more imformation soon. 

A massive shoutout to you, Ms Catalina! 

-Engage Rotary, change lives-

Wednesday 25 September 2013

Handing over

On Monday, the 23rd of September, Josephine and her mother, Sylvia, paid a visit to KISU!
^Sylvia (left), Josephine (centre), and Ingrid (right) 

Ingrid handed over 317,000 Ugx to Sylvia and Josephine which would cover for her medical checkup. Needless to say, they were ecstatic. 
"God bless you," whispered Josephine as she shyly received the money. 

^josephine (left), and Ingrid (right) 

"It was a poignant encounter and as long as being president gives me a certain authority and power to put a smile on somebody's face, this is something that I would never want to stop doing."- Ingrid, president of interact club. 

-Engage Rotary, change lives- 

Club members

Meet our members! 
Sandra- I'm fourteen, I'm Ugandan and I like pizza 

Joseph- I'm in grade ten and I like playing games. 

Emmanuel- I'm in year eight, I like playing games and I'm Ugandan.

Ingrid- I am the interact club president. It's my second year here in Kampala and I love every aspect of it. As president, I would love to be influential and inspire the members of the interact club as well as the KISU community to lend a helping hand to those who are less fortunate. 

-Engage Rotary, change lives- 

Sunday 22 September 2013

Josephine

Don't be afraid your life will end; be afraid that it will never begin- Grace Hansen 

Today the KISU Interact Club members had their very first outing!
^Kampala

As stated in our previous post, our aim is to improve the lives of those who need our help, and we decided that our very first project will be a collaborative project for a 19 year old girl living in a village in Kampala. Her name is Josephine and this is her story...
She has sickle-cell anemia which is the commonest genetic disease in the world. It is due to a mutation which causes haemoglobin molecules to stick together, in tissues with low oxygen concentrations. The chains of haemoglobin join together into bundles that are rigid enough to distort the red blood cells into a sickle shape. These sickle cells cause damage to tissues by becoming trapped in blood capillaries, blocking them and reducing blood flow. (Allot, Andrew and Mindorff, David. Biology Course Companion. Great Britain: Oxford university press, 2007.Print.)
Her father passed away and her mother lost her job recently. Her right hip joint has dug into the hip socket/pelvis so she has a limp. She finds it challenging to walk so she goes to school on a boda-boda. Due to the lack of income sometimes she cannot get the respective medications and has no choice but to endure the pain...
^(from left to right) Emmanuel (Interact Club member), Sandra (Interact Club member), Ingrid (Interact Club president), Josephine (sickle-cell anemia patient), Sylvia (Josephine's mother) 
^(from left to right) Josephine, Sylvia, Mrs Sophie B (our supervisor), Sandra, Emmanuel 
^an X-ray image showing Josephine's displaced right hip joint and socket. 

Unfortunately sickle cell anamia is more often than not considered a death sentence- meaning the life expectancy of the patient is very short. So we as members of the Interact club will be paying regular visits to her home and hosting fundraisers at school in order to purchase her medicines or pay for her boda-boda or even her school fees. For more updates please keep an eye out and please don't forget to subscribe! 


-Engage Rotary, change lives- 

First fundraiser

Greetings! 
This blog will be solely run by the Interact Club members of Kampala International School in Uganda. This club was founded this academic year by Mrs Sophie B, who is the director of public relations at Kasangati Rotary club, here in Kampala. 
Our aim is to illuminate and aid the lives of those who are in need of our help, and as a part of our first Interact project we conducted a fundraiser this week which successfully raised 317,000/= Ugandan Shillings (which would be equivalent to about 124.26 US$). Below are the pictures which depict what the fundraiser was about. 
 ^the president of Interact Club 2013-2014, Ingrid Saito in DP1 
 ^More than 120 roses were sold on Friday the 20th of September 2013-teachers' appreciation day.
^All the roses were hand-wrapped by the president of the Interact Club. Each rose included a card on which the sender could write their own message.

The Interact Club would like to extend our gratitude to everybody who purchased roses and contributed. And to those who didn't, there will be many more fundraisers to come! Keep an eye out and thank you for taking your time reading this. 

-Engage Rotary, Change lives-