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Events
Glad’s House on Sky Sport!
See Rocket Long’s “Rocket in Africa” stories about Glad’s House in Mombasa.
(view now)

5th September 2008

Annual Pro-Assist Charity Golf Day.
Our third Charity Golf Day with its unusual, Pro-Assist format, at Hartley Wintney Golf Club. Only a few team places left!
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8th May 2009
The Open Hickory Golf Challenge.
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Summer 2009
A City based Petanque (Boules) competition
We are working on this fun event now, let us know if you are interested.
5th September 2009
Annual Pro-Assist Charity Golf Day.
Our fourth Charity Golf Day with its unusual, Pro-Assist format, at Hartley Wintney Golf Club. Bookings already being made!
Volunteers wanted
if you would like to undertake volunteer work it just got easier! 
 
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Enterprise

February 2008
Glad’s House has just opened a ‘Cyber Café’ in Magongo, Mombasa, another example of our “spend money that generates money” enterprise schemes.

Before Christmas we purchased 10 reconditioned computers from the charity ComputerAid (www.computeraid.org) and shipped them to Mombasa. Cathie Duncan a volunteer we know was working with our partner The Mombasa Olympia Youth Organisation (MOYO) and helped to convert one of the offices into Glad’s House Cyber Café. She raised funds for this by doing a sky dive (Well done Cathie). It is to be run as a commercial enterprise for the use of local people (at a subsidised rate). The ‘street children’, if they are members of MOYO, can use the centre for one hour per week free! We hope that this will broaden the children horizons and also to encourage them to improve their reading. As the cyber cafe is in the same building as St Clares school we hope the children attending will also use the centre.  All profit from this enterprise will go to MOYO to help fund all the sporting activities and support functions they organise.

Help?  This is a ‘longshot’ request – do you know anyone in Mombasa who might have a second-hand photocopier they might want to sell?

November 2007
Glad’s house has co-sponsored the purchase of MOYO’s first Matatu/Mini Bus.  (A Matatu is a mode of transport in Kenya that falls between private transport and conventional bus transport.  Matatus have fixed routes, but "unfixed" stops and time schedules.  They stop anywhere to pickup or drop passengers.  They operate from about 05.00 until around 21.00).  In partnership with David Smith of Kenyashelp plus donations from Lise from Oslo Norway and Ita and Teresa from Waterford, Ireland - this is our first ‘commercial’ enterprise.  The bus is now generating funds which allows us to:

  • Provide our Partner Fred ‘Bokey’ Achola with a weekly wage for managing the Matatu.  (It is only recently that we found out he has been living ‘hand-to-mouth’ since starting MOYO).
  • Generated eight new jobs (4 drivers + 4 conductors).
  • Provide more work for the local boys - maintenance and cleaning.
  • Every Wednesday we are now able to fund ‘papasa’.  (In Swahili papasa means ‘hold gently’).  In the morning, we collect from the city, as many street children who want to come and play football for the day.  We bus them out to Mogongo, (MOYO’s base).  We remind them of the ‘acceptable and unacceptable behaviours’ and then they play football all day and so for the day they are allowed to be ‘children’ once more.  We supply as much clean drinking water as they can consume.  At the end of the day we take them to a local ‘kiosk’ (café) for dinner (probably their only proper meal of the week) and then bus them back to the city.  A tremendous time is had by all.
  • Every third Sunday, the Matatu will be available for MOYO to use for whatever purpose is required – trips to the beach etc.

This is the first of many planned schemes where we “spend money that generates money.”

You may have read in the “News Section” we have purchased a number of ‘conference chairs’ to use with the boxing ring.  Our great supporter David Smith from KenyasHelp managed to purchase these at a highly discounted price.  With the money left over we were also able to purchase the first ever petrol lawn mower in Magongo.  This saves the young boys and girls the back breaking task of cutting grass with scythes in unbearable heat.  It also provides us with the opportunity of paying a couple of the local boys to mow the football and basketball courts – another example of “spend money that generates money.”