Wanted - a good home
Life is slowly returning to normal after the new year holidays. Down at the Nyamirambo project, the INN Club has resumed and the children’s English seems to be growing in leaps and bounds.
Life is slowly returning to normal after the new year holidays. Down at the Nyamirambo project, the INN Club has resumed and the children’s English seems to be growing in leaps and bounds.
Today's excursion took us up-country to Rutonde district, 10 kilometres north of Kigali. We were visiting the Parish of Pastor Immaculee Mukamusoni who runs a children's project up there.
What we thought would pass as a quiet summer turned out being spend organising the launch of our latest project in Rutonde, north of Kigali.
We couldn't let the year run out without another visit to our projects in Rwanda. Bronwen and Ann have been checking up on things for three weeks over November and December.
Pastor Immaculee is an energetic and driven woman. Her parish is at Rutonde, north of Kigali where we are helping her to provide for the poorest children.
We are in for a long hot day today. The rain of last week seems to have gone and the heat is more like a real Rwandan dry season.
It has been another hot day and I am walking home from Nyabugogo with a basket of beans on my back and a cardboard box in my arms.
At Rutonde our porridge and goats project is bearing fruit, or at least kids.
We visited Rutonde yesterday and got really good vibes from this community. First we had a short bus ride to Nyabugogo where we met Pastor Jean d'Amour.
One of Mission Rwanda's activities is helping widows set up in business to support themselves and their families.