The memorable 7 day visit to St. Jude Family Projects & Training Centre in March was a dream of opportunity and promises come true for the team of pastors, church workers, and GROW members representing Kobwin subcounty. They had waited patiently since last September when the ARISE team suggested the farm visit. The people have land and labour. What they need is support to efficiently and effectively maximize its productivity. The results will be long term food security, sustainability, and eradicating poverty. The St. Jude training is one of the ways ARISE is coming along side.
Josephine, the founder & executive director of St. Jude, welcomed the team to St. Jude and strongly emphasized the importance of being determined and taking their training seriously, and that they should return [home] with a determined effort, bearing in mind that someone, somewhere, funded the sponsorship for the training. At the conclusion of the training, she advised the group not to be selfish with what they have received but to humble themselves to God and share with others when they got back.
Rev. Opolot James assisted in translating, since Josephine did not speak Ateso, the local dialect of Kobwin, nor did the group speak Josephine's local dialect. And only some of the group spoke English!
In the photo the group is peering into an underground storage tank used to harvest run-off water.
Pastor Okiror David is checking out a space-saving tiered vegetable garden, that can be easily irrigated with upturned water bottles and a layer of mulch. It was Pastor David's request, on behalf of the local pastors, for sustainable development ideas that prompted ARISE to propose sending a group of people from Kobwin to St. Jude for training.
One of the many practical sessions was on how to make a kitchen garden. The team is tying cut-off pegs together to form a compost basket. Using bricks, they will mark off an area surrounding the compost basket, which they will mound with soil ready for planting.
The kitchen garden grows lots of vegetables in a small area all year round, right next to the house. It saves many steps and is easily maintained.
One kitchen garden ready to plant! During the visit, I (Winnie) was told many times a day, "Isirereng esi Edeke, usete kesi ikaru kere." In Ateso, their local dialect, this means "God bless you. Let God grant long life to the people who have sowed this gift to us!"
Classroom sessions included many topics ... Organic farming ... Basics of Modernization of Agriculture ... Water Management on the Farm ... Vegetable Growing ... Piggery Farming ... Family Hygiene ... Reproductive Health including HIV/AIDS testing. So keen were the pastors that they requested for late evening sessions until 10 pm on some nights!
Thank you for coming along side the people by funding the intensive training at St. Jude. The specialized and customized sessions are a valuable resource, which will have stunning success. The community participants from Kobwin came back armed with, not only theoretical, but vast practical knowledge and ready to implement on their families and farms.(Thanks to Winnie, the ARISE Coordinator, members of the GROW team, and Pastor Okiror David for contributing the informative text and photos for this post!
Check out the August 2010 posts in the Blog Archive to learn more about Josephine's story and St. Jude Family Project.)

