Wunlang School Project
The Wunlang School was constructed and furnished in 2008. Between 600 and 800 boys and girls attend classes, and the facility is used for women's literacy training when the regular classes are through for the day.
We are now turning our attention to other needs in the remote village of Wunlang, including:
Please visit our Photo Gallery page and You Tube page to see the progress made in Wunlang village.
Remember - "You can make the diiference" Please donate today! Thank you.
We are now turning our attention to other needs in the remote village of Wunlang, including:
- School uniform sewing project
- Health clinic
- School farm
Please visit our Photo Gallery page and You Tube page to see the progress made in Wunlang village.
Remember - "You can make the diiference" Please donate today! Thank you.
Theou Village School
In Theou, children are writing their letters in the dust. The teachers are teenagers whose parents can afford to send them to boarding school. On their school holidays, these students are returning to their villages to teach what they know.
Read more and see updates at the Theou Village School blog
Read more and see updates at the Theou Village School blog
Aweil Orphanage and School
Village Help for South Sudan proposes to build an orphanage and school to serve the needs of an ever-growing population of orphans and homeless children in Aweil. Our strategy is to fund the project through a cooperation with international organizations, private donations, and a co-investment partnership with the government of the state of Northern Bahr el Ghazal, with all parties collaborating on the design and implementation of the facility and its programs.
Read more and see updates at the Aweil Orphanage and School blog
Read more and see updates at the Aweil Orphanage and School blog
Alel Community Project
Malong Malual was born in the Alal community, in Warrap State. When he was a boy, he was abducted by northern Sudanese. Malong worked as a child slave for about a year before he escaped. It was too dangerous to go back home, so he fled to Khartoum, where he was educated for a time in the Comboni Missionary schools. He then made his way back south to Twic County. There he learned that the murahaleen — called janjaweed by Darfurians — were still targeting his village. The safest place for him to go was Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya.
Read more and see updates at the Alel Community Project blog
Read more and see updates at the Alel Community Project blog