#AfterEbola
The Impact of the OICC
If you have been following the progress of the Ebola outbreak, you’ll know that all of the schools in Sierra Leone are closed. Recently, President Ernest Bai Koroma issued an instruction that no schools would be opened until the WHO declares Sierra Leone free from Ebola. Whilst you may find this a distressing announcement, we…
Read MoreRogbere: Giving Thanks
EducAid’s Rogbere School was founded in 2010 and usually educates more than 320 students. In 2013, A Call to Business built and opened a home for orphans, many of who are disabled in one way or another, next to the school. We are delighted to be providing education to some of these youngsters. Unfortunately, numbers…
Read More4Ms Fighting Ebola: Alfred J Fornah
Alfred J Fornah is a teacher at the Mafoimba School, one of our 4Ms in the Tonkolil district. Mafoimba is a product of our partnership with Make It Happen, a fruitful joint venture that has seen us open 4 schools in one of the most isolated districts in Sierra Leone. As explained in our previous…
Read MoreSurviving Ebola: Salamatu Conteh
Salamatu Conteh is a student at EducAid. Over the past few weeks I have asked all of our Site Coordinators to find people who have directly experienced the effects of Ebola, and to interview them so that we can tell their story. Brima is one of EducAid’s most senior staff in Sierra Leone, and he…
Read MorePastor Anthony Kabia: his Ebola story
Anthony Kabia is Pastor in Makalie town in the Tonkolili district. The Tonkolili district is the location of EducAid’s most recent developments in our educational network – the 4Ms schools. Mathele Bana, Mafoimba, Makaragube, and Masorie Kargbo are the result of a partnership with Make It Happen (MIH), where MIH were responsible for building the…
Read MoreChristmas from EducAid
Christmas in Sierra Leone is typically a fun-filled affair. With music, parties, and vibrant atmosphere, the cities, towns and villages are a buzz of excitement. This year was somewhat different; with a strict restriction on public gatherings imposed at the beginning of the Ebola outbreak, it has been a muted festive season. Just before Christmas…
Read MoreA huge step forward: OICCs Operational
“Not everybody who sees this will realise just how hard it might be to secure such a letter.” The letter in question is the Certificate of Authorisation in Port Loko. In this post we’re going to try and give you an insight in to how important this single piece of paper is for our ambitions…
Read MoreLiving with Ebola: Sillah Sesay
Sillah, sitting in the middle, with two of his new EducAid friends. He is 14 years old and attended Christ The King School in Bo before Ebola struck. At the beginning of the summer holidays, Sillah travelled from his school in Bo to Moyamba Junction, about an hour and a half journey South East by…
Read MoreLiving with Ebola: Mohamed Anthony Kamara
Mohamed Anthony Kamara, and ex-EducAid student and current EducAid staff. Last week I was speaking with one of the site coordinators, Alhaji Kamara, better know to those in EducAid as AA. I asked him whether there were many Ebola survivors close to the EducAid compound, and if there were any that he thought would be…
Read MoreEbola Today: A worsening crisis in Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone is facing a worsening Ebola crisis day by day. Whilst it’s neighbours begin to seize control over the vicious and deadly virus, Sierra Leone’s number of Ebola cases continues to spiral higher and higher. Despite the sluggish start to the international response, it is now not the volume of aid that is impeding…
Read MoreMiriam Mason-Sesay: The Angel of Freetown
I stumbled across an article from 2008 while researching another blog post. Reading it made me sit, stop, and really consider the impact of what EducAid does. During the course of the year or so that I have been involved with the charity I have been told about the impact of the civil war on…
Read MoreClose Call – Donald Whenzle
Donald Whenzle is another member of the EducAid community that has had to grapple with the ferocious Ebola virus. Donald grew up in Waterloo, attending both Primary and Junior Secondary school there before joining EducAid to finish his Senior Secondary studies. He was shocked on his arrival because of the vast differences in teaching methods. His previous…
Read MoreReturning to Kigbal – EducAid on the BBC
The picture that we painted nearly a month ago in Kigbal was not one full of promise. Coinciding with a BBC News journalist, Miriam visited a small village called Kigbal, 4 hours northeast of the capital, Freetown. The BBC Journalist, Andrew Harding, described the scene like this: “A smooth tarmac road runs through the middle…
Read MoreInterim Care Centre – #AfterEbola Phase 3
Last week we outlined the need for the 3rd phase of our fight in this Ebola outbreak. This week we are taking a huge step towards implementing an effective and progressive programme for life after Ebola. There are huge numbers of children, the most vulnerable members of society, being orphaned by the vicious Ebola virus.…
Read MoreEffective Changes from Within – #afterebola Phase 3
West Africa has faced the worst medical crisis of a generation. Sierra Leone, a country devastated by a decade long civil war only 13 years ago, now faces a humanitarian crisis of dreadful proportions. Ebola has created a divisions within our society: discontent with the domestic and international reaction to the outbreak; stigmatised sufferers and…
Read More#afterebola phase 2 – Education by Podcast
At the beginning of this blog, we set out our 3 stage plan to combat the effects of Ebola on our students, staff, and the wider population as a whole. The first of these phases was to implement protocols to protect our sites from any potential Ebola threat. Now deep in to the worst Ebola…
Read MoreGetting the best from EducAid
We’ve had a few requests from people who wanted to receive inboxed updates from our blog, so we’ve decided to give you a quick guide to keeping up-to-date with our blog and social media. Sign up to our blog to receive our posts in your inbox You can do this from any of the pages…
Read MoreLiving with Ebola: AJ & Kai
AJ (pictured) & Kai are the site coordinators at EducAid Magbeni, one of the EducAid schools in the most hard-hit areas of Sierra Leone, the Port Loko district. AJ and Kai are responsible for looking after the students and staff at our school, and for ensuring that security, welfare and morale are being kept at…
Read MoreA sobering experience
As the global media attention begins to tire and to sway on to other more sensational stories, it would be easy for the public to think that Ebola situation has gotten better. Let us be clear, it has not. Have you seen the BBC piece on Kigbal, a small town 4 hours north of Freetown?…
Read MoreLiving with Ebola: Abu ‘Pirez’ Kanu
Pirez is a man who has come all the way through the EducAid system, and someone that typifies everything that we stand for. We asked him a few questions to give us an overview of what life is really like on the ground in Sierra Leone, from someone who is fighting the battle every day.…
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