CPC girls heading for Kenya next week
| Paddy O'Connor with Faye McNally and Aoife Moran (Julia Noble wasn't available for the photo). |
Three Fifth-Year students from CPC will be among a group of 40 young people and adult volunteers heading out on Monday to spend two weeks working at the Cara Girls Rescue Centre outside Nairobi, Kenya, writes Brian Byrne. They are the latest local young people to participate in a project that has been running for around two decades.
The Cara Projects initiative was started by Ballysax man Paddy O'Connor, who was originally a co-founder of the Maintain Hope charity with Gerry O'Donoghue. With a construction background, Paddy moved from that to working on building schools in Ngong, bringing fellow tradesmen out to Kenya for short stints to help. He established the Girls Rescue Centre about 15 years ago on land he purchased in Kibiko. The volunteer groups that travel each January and February currently work on building new homes for local families.
The three CPC students on this latest trip are Faye McNally, Aoife Moran, and Julia Noble. For Aoife, it's a second time travelling — she participated in the January trip last year as a TY student. She says it was "the best two weeks of my life, and I just had to go back again." Interaction with the children at the centre was what made it such a great experience, she said. Faye had hoped to travel last year as a TY student but wasn't selected — more than 200 would-be volunteers apply for each trip from schools across Kildare and Dublin. She's very much looking forward to the experience.
Each participant had to raise €2,500, and the three CPC girls did so through a series of bake sales, a pyjama day at the school, bag-packing at Dunnes Stores, and donations from family and friends who wanted to help. Their final fundraiser was last evening with a table quiz in Fallons. The three girls are very grateful for the support they received from their families and friends, as well as from the teachers at CPC.
Cara Projects works with members of the Maasai tribe in the region, and Paddy O'Connor says the initiative has helped around 800 girls since its inception. The aid includes skills teaching and providing long-term support, such as paying school fees. "Some of our children are now grown up, some of them married," he notes, adding that over the years he has observed positive changes in attitudes towards girls and women. Apart from poverty, key issues have been cultural, including early marriage and the practice of female genital mutilation.
"Change is happening, through education and the work of our local teams," he says. "It won't work by outsiders imposing our attitudes." An important factor has been building trust within the local community. "That can be hard to do, but it is definitely, definitely changing."
Regarding the work of the young volunteers, he has a simple message: "There is nothing wrong with our Irish teenagers. I've brought over 700 of them to Kenya, and they are caring, capable, and compassionate."
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