Friday, 23 May 2014

BACK TO SCHOOL.

The 1st term holiday is finally over and its time to go back to school. These are some of the children after receiving scholastic materials from FALCCO. Thanks all our partners and sponsors for making all this possible. The children are now accessing better quality education due to the support. They can now have break tea and lunch at the school that we've taken them to. Before, they used to walk long distances going home for lunch and then back to school.








Had fun with the children; singing, dancing, playing...













Inside a hut (small, grass thatched house) belonging to one of the Batwa families.

Batwa demonstrating how they used to make fire for cooking in the forest. They would rub a dry piece of wood against another strongly untill the friction caused a smoke and some little ash which they then put in dry grass and puff till a fire is sparked off.


WE ENJOYED HOSTING YOU!

We were privileged once again to host a team of students from Gorteburg University, Sweden from 12th to 19th May 2014. We visited families, the children had great fun learning Swedish children's songs and playing with their visitors, visited a Batwa settlement near Mgahinga forest; the stories are endless but here goes.....

We watched the Batwa perform their cultural dances. These are a minority peaple group in Kisoro that previously lived in the forests around Kisoro district in Uganda and in D.R Congo. When the forests were gazetted into National parks, they were sent out without being compensated or given alternative land for cultivation. they now live as squatters on other peaples land, working for them to survive. They, however have a very rich cultural heritage. They are experts at understanding the flora and fauna around the forests, they know which plants can work as medicinal herbs and which for food. In the forests they had lived as hunters and fruit gatherers. it was fun as they demonstrated to us how they killed the animals during hunting.