Monday, October 23, 2017

Many Mansions of Christ International-Uganda: Update on Poultry Project progress October 2017-Ug...

Many Mansions of Christ International-Uganda: Update on Poultry Project progress October 2017-Ug...: From the last time we went to Soroti in February 2017 to see to the finishing of the roof after saving for a whole...

Update on Poultry Project progress October 2017-Uganda






From the last time we went to Soroti in February 2017 to see to the finishing of the roof after saving for a whole year,  we also saved again for 7 months so we could go back and see if we could actually start this project. We've used some of the money over the 7 months to plaster the store room and the largest room. We found it looking very nice and got our worker to thoroughly clean and disinfect to prepare for bringing chicks. 





We spent our first day there shopping for items we knew we would need like feeder trays and water cones and other supplies. In the village there is no piped water so we bought a water drum and some 5 gal cans so they can bring water from a near by water borehole at the school. Like this:  




Also, we repaired 2 bicycles that were around so they can carry the cans full of water. We hope yet to add gutters to the building and buy another water drum and collect rainwater so they can use it for cleaning. The chicks water is pure and fresh. Even people can drink water from a borehole without boiling it. It's quite delicious in fact! I've drank it and am  fine. 



The next day we hired a car and brought all the items we bought to the village. ​We bought gloves, gum boots, and jumpers for the workers, basins for cleaning and for stepping in disinfectant before entering the chick room, Papyrus mats and so much more.





The water drum was full of supplies



Then we held our Vet training:



Our Vet is a young man named Peter who just graduated from University with a full Veterinary degree. He has not found work yet so he decided to stay on daily and help us with the chicks. He has been invaluable to us and is only asking the same wage as the farm worker. 

​Peter the Vet



After the training, the next day,we went back to town and shopped for all the things we had no idea we needed but found out from Peter. LOTS of things. 

We had to have two brooding rings made from wire and thin wood to accommodate chicks up to 3 weeks old. We bought a LOT of charcoal and charcoal pots to keep them warm. We had purchased the biggest Solar we could afford but it isn't big enough to keep 60 watt lightbulbs over the chicks for warmth.It can only light reg, 7 w bulbs and we had to add two per room so the chicks could see at night to eat. .
Brooder ring in the making

We purchased a 50 watt panel. We bought a battery and a breaker box but still need an Inverter which will allow the staff to charge their phones at least. 


Solar panel on roof-50 watts



 ​
We planted Maize behind the poultry house to hopefully use to mix with chicken feed when the chicks get bigger. The first two times we bought seeds and planted the drought dried all of it up. This crop is short but there is some corn there. We will see.....it can help save money on the feed costs. 







This area next to the biggest room where chicks are is where we will put up an outdoor enclosure. We don't have enough money for a wire fence so we are using Papyrus mats and poles to make it for now. Soon they will be able to peck around outside. We have a small enclosure there now even to get them out for a bit during the day and allow the farm worker to clean inside and put down new litter. We really want a permanent fenced in area coming from each room eventually. God willing.


Area next to house that will be fenced soon



We had to hang heavy curtains in the room to keep it so hot for the one day old chicks and even up til now. We hope to have wood shutters made in the future so that they can open and close as needed. They tell us that when it rains they have to move the chicks brooding rings to the side of the room so they don't get wet. We still need to plaster the outside of the building someday and even build some rooms off the backside and double the amount of chicks. 


First chicks are in the far right room now


Back side of poultry house which we want to make more rooms.




On the last day, October 5th we had to go back to Mityana. Later in the day the chicks arrived and the farm workers were ready. Sadly the company that transfers the one day chicks from far (about a 6 hour drive) made a mistake and they were loaded under the boot of the bus in their boxes and 90 died. (They should have been carried in the passenger area).Of the 310 we ordered we got 224 live one-day-old chicks. They gave us some for free they had at the store which is located about 2 hours from Soroti in Mbale Uganda. The company is reimbursing us the 90 chicks when we re-order again next time.

Of the 224, that night 2 died. Then a week later 2 more but they tell us they just weren't right from the start. Since then up til now, 220 chicks are there and have done VERY WELL! We thank our vet and farm workers for such a great job done!


 They are 3 weeks old now this Wed. They tell us they are jumping outside of their brooder and eating five cups of feed each day.





They are thriving and growing. The first 70 kg bag of starters mash chick feed is just about over. We bought 3 bags and it looks like we will use 1.5 bags which leaves 1.5 for the next batch of chicks. Today we bought their next feed which is called growers mash and is mixed with maize. 

We will hire a photographer and get more clear photos. 

Vaccinations have been costly too but necessary. They are refrigerated and there is no fridge around in the village so the exact day they need vaccinated someone rides a bike 9 km to town with a thermos and fills it with ice, buys the vaccine and brings it right back so they can inject the chicks. We hope one day to buy a motorcycle and have a large enough solar to buy a small fridge and run it. 

We had a donation from someone in U.S. so we decided to plaster the room to the left of the big room so we will get a photo of that too when we send a photographer to the village. 

In mid-November we would love to re-order those 90 chicks and add 110 to make 200 and start again. These birds take 3-4 months to grow to full weight for sales.  It could be 420 chickens x approx. 30,000 UGX each. 

The Many Mansions of Christ Intl. Poultry project is not fully self-sustainable yet but after 4 years of sacrificing and building and it is nice to see chicks there! Our donors have helped us immensely. 

We didn't come this far to just come this far. If anyone wishes to help us in these next few months until the sale of these chicks and even after we would be so thankful! We want to build another poultry house in Bugiri, Uganda.

 In Jesus' name! Amen!




Saturday, August 12, 2017

Quarterly Report for April-June 2017

MANY MANSIONS OF CHRIST INTERNATIONAL
P.O BOX 294 MITYANA UGANDA
TELEPHONE: +256776551180


Quarterly Report for April-June 2017

Greetings once again to all our members, supporters and board members of MMOCI. Here are the activities, challenges, and way forward for the 3 months of April, May and June of 2017.

ACTIVITIES


EVANGELISM:
 In the month of April we were given an opportunity to minister during Easter to the congregation of Kitodha Pentecostal church in Bugiri, Uganda. 


Kitodha Pentecostal Church Bugiri, Uganda


In the same period of time we also ministered to orphans in Jinja, Uganda. They were happy to receive the message of God. Laundry soap was donated to the women caring for orphans at their community home.


Bridge of Hope Child Care Ministries Jinja, Uganda


A bit later we also ministered in Mityana Pentecostal Church. The message was well-received by the members in attendance.

In the month of May 2107, we were able to distribute some gospel tracts to students at Future Day and Boarding School in Bulenga, Uganda.  They were excited to read the message. We prayed and shared the Word of God with them at their school.



Future Day and Boarding School Bulenga, Uganda

       
  
                                     
 EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE:

Through our supporters from the UK and US we have been able to continue paying fees for the children both in Mityana and Soroti District respectively.

POULTRY PROJECT:

Through our continued support from Mick in the UK, we have managed to plaster a storage room and one large room of the poultry house. We hope to begin this long awaited project in the month of October2017 with as many chickens as we can and have saved for this far.  We are excited to be close to starting and would like to thank Mick Tulk for his continued prayers and support over these past years.



                                           Two rooms were plastered inside the poultry house
                                           
                                   The largest room of four finished and the Store Room (bottom)

AGRICULTURE:

We were informed by many poultry farmers that buying chicken feed was one of the major challenges in successfully managing a chicken project.  In response to this information we decided to commission families within Asuret Sub-county Soroti to grow maize for the project. 



Maize planted in June

        
VOLUNTEERS:

We have continued receiving gifts for kids from our UK volunteer Jill. Three children received scholastic materials and other gifts in the last quarter.



Opio John's uncle James receiving gift as Opio was away at school

  
 CHALLENGES

Lack of enough funds
In that quarter there was drought affecting agriculture in the areas where maize was planted for the project. 

WAY FORWARD

Continue reaching out to more children
Keep networking
Continue fund-raising for the poultry project
Keep praying for each other

CONCLUSION

We thank everyone who continues to support our ministry. May the Almighty God bless you!

Principal Director
Okumu Stephen
_____________________________







FINANCIAL REPORT FOR APRIL-JUNE 2017

Education           1310000 (UGX)
Rent                     1050000
Poultry                 1010000
Electricity             430,000
Water                     27,000
Internet                450,000
Evangelism            40,000
Food                      115,000
Stationary              57,500
Scholastic               20,000
Volunteers           480,000
Television             210,000
Transport                20,000
Communication    130,000
Agriculture            241,000

Grand Total:  5,590,500 UGX   ($1575 US)

Local Donations    $935 US   

Foreign Donations $640 US   = ($1575 US)

Update on Poultry Project:





https://www.canva.com/design/DACbrs7ZuTU/1tJ4IFYaM9hra0IllrzXJw/view?utm_content=DACbrs7ZuTU&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link&utm_source=sharebutton

As of now we are are targeting buying chicks by the end of September or early October. We have about $500 saved and need about that much and more to be sure we can pay workers and feed the chicken until they are grown in December. Two rooms have been plastered; the store room and the largest room. If we could finish the other two rooms we could plan to save for another 200-300 chicks to be raised in them. We still need solar as there is no power in the village. This project has been 4 long years in the making and we are ready to get going and get to the business of helping so many impoverished Ugandans! Please help us to help others! In Jesus Name. For His Glory!

Sunday, May 21, 2017

Poultry Project Brochure for Many Mansions of Christ Intl. / Uganda


Poultry Project Brochure for Many Mansions of Christ Intl. / Uganda

https://www.canva.com/design/DACNuWp2JOQ/XAOsHf21GytaV9K6XzAr6Q/view?utm_content=DACNuWp2JOQ&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link&utm_source=sharebutton

We are still awaiting funding for this project. To date we have received $175. The next phase of building completion is to plaster the walls inside. The estimate from the builder is $332 USD total for 4 rooms. We will plaster 1 room for chicks and 1 storage room next month with the donations raised so far.

If anyone is interested in helping us to help others, please contribute. Information is on the brochure how to help us. or

PAYPAL.ME/CHERYLDERBY

Monday, April 24, 2017

I have a question.....

I would consider myself a fairly positive person.  Open minded and able to speak my mind freely. Anyone who knows me well knows that I am very straightforward. I don’t believe in mixing my words with rainbow-colored unicorn nonsense.  A lot of words stay tucked away neatly in my head because my momma taught me that if I can’t say anything nice don’t say anything at all. Overall, I am a nice girl. I am not a sarcastic person but I have a wicked sense of humor. I later in life attributed that quality to being a nurse for so many years. When you’ve seen what I have coming out of a human body….. or going into….well let’s just say “it’s laugh or cry”. You develop coping skills. 

Actually, that’s another story. This one is about something on my mind lately that I can’t keep compartmentalized anymore in my brain. It’s leaking out daily into my everyday thoughts and I’m trying to understand it. I am confused. Maybe a bit depressed. I am for sure profoundly disappointed and extremely sad. It’s a question mark that fills the entire spectrum of my understanding these days.
When I was little, I mean even from 6 years old, when I attended Catholic school, we were infiltrated with reel-to reel tapes of Mother Teresa caring for the Lepers in Calcutta or Bangladesh. I am still not sure where all these years later but as a child it seemed a desperate lonely place with one smiling little woman hugging disfigured people. I felt compassion inside my chest. I would lay awake at night thinking about it. I attended Catechism classes on Monday nights at 7. All through the years they taught us charity. We helped others. We felt compassion. We wanted to make someone’s life a little better, even for a day. We did local mission work. Cleaning a house for an elderly person, sweeping a neighborhood. Just because it was the right thing to do.

I was a Girl Scout. We were taught to help others and be kind and considerate. We held fundraisers, visited animal shelters. Sold cookies…. yup THOSE cookies. We were involved in our communities. It was not about ourselves but what we could do for humanity. We were taught to think outside ourselves. To care. To love one another. Maybe I lived in a grand time in history when those things were still a priority. When as Mother Teresa said “if you can’t feed the masses, then feed just one”.

Fast forward to today. I live in a small landlocked, devastatingly poor country deep in the heart of Africa. I am 9,000 miles from anything comfortable. I chose to be here. I saw suffering and thought I could help. Even though I have an incurable autoimmune disease called Lupus. I figured before I died I could get in one last effort to “feed just one”.  It’s ingrained in me. No matter how discouraged I get I cannot shake the compassion I feel in my heart for people.

With today’s media outlets, the world is not so big anymore. We see everything.  Television news is our window to the world. We see children killed in Syria and families on the move, migrating around world looking for a place to sleep, often in a white tent on a donated thin mattress. We see senseless acts of violence in civilized places. People used to think Africa was the barbaric place on the planet. I see more nonsense on the world news from other places. People ‘over there’ seem to care only about themselves. It’s ‘me and mine’ only. When I was a kid if someone in the neighborhood had a family problem like a death or a medical problem we rushed in with casseroles and a hug.

I have chosen, in my 4 years in Africa, to shield my friends and family from the atrocities of poverty I see daily.  I could use social media to portray the harsh realities. Every day on the news there has been another child mutilated and killed in ritualistic sacrifices ordered by the witch doctors. The reason people went to the witch doctor to begin with? To keep their husband from cheating. Or to ‘get rich’. Or maybe they had a dispute with another clan and want to put a curse on them. ‘Witch doctoring’ is big business in Uganda. Even pastors frequent them. Poverty creates ingenuity. When you have to feed your kids you can even exploit mass ignorance to get money. Even if it means stealing and cutting up children.

Daily there are accidents on the pothole ridden and rain-washed-away roads. Government corruption is rampant. Public transportation is the main mode of getting around. Taxi vans stuff people in on top of one another to get more money. When they crash because the driver was speeding so he could get in enough trips in that day, bodies lay torn open and intestines and brains spilling out on the road. I see it on the news. There are no seat belts or air bags. There are very few ambulances and medical centers are horrible beyond description. In America we take our dogs to veterinary hospitals 100 times better than a human hospital in Uganda. I could share the photos and create a shock factor to ask for money but I just can’t. If  ask for help..... am I asking on a whim? To buy myself a Lexus? I could've stayed in my comfortable country but I am a human advocate. I would fight for you no matter where you lived. So I keep questioning in my mind how when I ask for help…. how am I ignored?

I came here to feed just one. I am on a very low fixed income. I try to feed who I can. When they come barefoot to my door, I give them my shoes. I am running out of shoes. I give them any extra money I have in a month. The requests vary from school fees to enough money to buy $5 Malaria medicine so their child can live. Malaria kills many little kids here. It may be even less than $5. Many are just hungry. Let me say that again. They are JUST HUNGRY.

Recently I put out a brochure to finish an on-going income-generating project to provide money to help MORE people. I appealed to my friends and family one time so as to not have to ask again. God bless the small few who responded. I will use every penny towards the project. I am not giving up. I will keep praying and believe in time I can finish the project on my own with my meager resources. Even if it takes 4 MORE years. If I live 4 more years. If there will be any people left to help. They are dying of hunger these days. Drought sucks. I won’t show photos of those ones on my social media but I may keep asking for help…. to help just one. And then hopefully…… maybe……...the masses. 

  In the meantime I will keep having this big question in my mind………….


Does anyone make and deliver casseroles anymore?

Sunday, April 2, 2017

Chip in for a Chick- Many Mansions of Christ Intl. 2017 fundraiser

https://www.canva.com/design/DACNuWp2JOQ/XAOsHf21GytaV9K6XzAr6Q/view?utm_content=DACNuWp2JOQ&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link&utm_source=sharebutton

Greetings from Uganda!                                                  April 2, 2017
We hope you are well and 2017 has been good so far. We are okay here in Africa though drought has affected many of our friends and family. Most people here are subsistence farmers and with crops dried out before harvest time, words like ‘food insecurity’ and ‘starvation’ dominate the news.
We are here to help those we can and have been doing so since 2013. Even when someone comes to our door hungry, we give from our own stock; usually fresh produce, rice, beans, pasta, or some small money but these days the numbers are increasing. People were already poor.
We have posted a brochure about a fundraiser we are holding for the completion of our income-generating project. We began this ministry project in 2013 and are close to making it operational. We have saved and sacrificed to slowly get this far but now due to the severity of the situation we are doing something we’ve never done before……..asking for your assistance.
We know times are tough for most right now. We have not made it our practice to ask for anything and we are humbled completely when someone gives us a donation of any amount.  If you feel it on your heart to help us, know that our goal for the ministry is to be self-sufficient and quickly able to respond to the needs of as many as we can; here in Uganda and one day around the world.
Thank you for your time, interest and consideration. We offer an invitation to any of you to come visit us in Uganda and have a fascinating experience!

Love, Cheryl and Stephen 

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Just Surviving Africa

In 2013 I came to Uganda, East Africa for the first time. I was here 3 months and returned to America. Seven months later I flew to Uganda again, this time staying 3 months again but I went back for just 7 weeks and returned. On December 10, 2014 I flew into Entebbe Airport Uganda and have stayed ever since.

Uganda……. “The Pearl of Africa” they call it.  A place of sunshine and warm temperatures year round, the trees stay green and lush and markets are continually filled with fresh produce. Fruits are so sweet, especially the pineapples. Banana trees will grow anywhere, even in a crack in a sidewalk.  Mangoes of every variety delight the taste buds. Avocados grow everywhere, hanging heavily from the branches. Birds of every kind nest in the many trees and different ones come and go with the seasons. They delight my ears with their symphonies of sing-song-y calls to each other.   Geckos and other colorful lizards sunbathe lazily at the tops of security walls and trees, but will arouse from their sleepiness to chase away another lizard in an energy-burst millisecond; legs and long tails whipping about every which way.
Blue Turraco bird eating Papaya


Blue tree Agama basking in the sunshine

 People may think I came to Uganda to vacation. To spend my days resting under a big umbrella while sipping passion fruit juice and fanning myself with one hand and holding a book in the other . Living in the lap of luxury and never breaking a fingernail doing hard work.  Well, as much as I wish I had THAT LIFE, the reality of it is quite different.  I am not complaining; just reflecting and analyzing things.

In 2013 I was a visitor. I observed, I learned, I shared, I cared, and I went back to my comfortable country.  In 2014 I was still a visitor but in planning my future and realizing Uganda would become my permanent home, I began feeling more like a non-visitor.  By 2015 I was a full-time Amerigandan. I married my husband Stephen, a Ugandan and we began living our lives together in our rented house.  We paid for electricity but it was off more than on.  We had running water but soon after our February marriage drought caused the taps to run dry. Showers became a thing of the past and splashy bird-baths my new normal.

For cooking we had a one burner, coil hot-plate but with power off so much I soon became an expert at lighting a small charcoal stove.  Charcoal here is supplied by the many trees people cut down every day to burn until blackened and sold for profit. No neat and tidy Kingsford here. MOST Ugandans burn with either wood or this charcoal and have for years and years. The trees are disappearing at an alarming rate and not enough new trees are being planted in their place. Every year the dry season becomes longer and rain less when it’s supposed to come.
My 2-burner hotplate on the right... I cooked for and served 52 at our Christmas party
 
Me cooking on a charcoal stove after the rain had passed.

 Washing clothes is all done by hand, usually with rain-water collected in the rainy season from the roof gutters which flow into large black drums.  When dry season is long and water cannot be found to buy (in large plastic containers called jerry cans)and be carried to our house, rainwater also becomes the main water for bathing and washing dishes (called “washing plates” here).


We do not own a car. Getting around is either done by walking, riding a hired motorcycle (called a Boda Boda) or riding in a taxi-van.  Walking is a difficult for me since I have Rheumatoid Arthritis and Systemic Lupus so we often pay for transport. I can walk short distances on flat (no hills) roads but we live in a very hill-y town.  Boda boda’s for hire are many and we mostly use them. 
Boda boda's for hire in my town

It is the culture for a woman here to ride seated sideways (not cowboy-on-a-horse style) with legs to one side. Riding at 30 mph it feels like sitting on a swing hanging from an airplane. I hang onto the underside of the seat with one hand and the back carrying rack with the other.  Somehow I have tricked myself into believing that it’s supporting my 200+lb weight just fine in case we start falling over.  Sometimes I don’t even hold on because my skirt wants to blow up and cover my head so I have to hold it down! (We dress like women here-skirts or dresses-no pants). I have also convinced myself that if I ever feel the Boda is about to crash I can jump off easily like I used to fly off a moving swing as a kid and land a “10” like an Olympian off the balance beam. Thank God I have never had to try yet!


When we travel to Kampala, the main city in Uganda about 60 km away, we use a hired taxi-van.  It is a Toyota van which is designed to seat around 15 but invariably is packed like canned sardines with around 18-22 people including kids and an occasional chicken (or 3). Usually someone is sitting halfway on your lap while you are perched halfway on someone else’s. There is no A/C in these vans, just small sliding windows and most of them closed because Ugandans believe that any wind (or rain) on them will cause “a flu” (cold symptoms) or will mess their hair (the women).  Most days in Uganda the temps are around 84 F but in the hot, dry season can reach 90-100F.  Deodorant is sold here in the supermarkets though most don’t know about it, can’t afford it or just don’t care to use it.
Taxi vans at the taxi park in Kampala

I came here to try to do my part to help others in this world somehow, especially the children. I cannot work but I do not sit under any umbrella sipping anything.  Just surviving day to day is time-consuming and difficult. I don’t hire anyone full-time to clean or cook or wash clothes.  My husband and I share the daily chores including cooking. Even now 3 years later I still only have a 2 burner hot plate to cook on, not even an oven. We have no refrigerator. On rare occasions when I get to have a cold soda or cold bottled water my brain acts as if I am eating a snow-cone and Brain-Freeze quickly follows.

My husband is accustomed to this life but for me it’s been a learning experience and a slow transition.   But 3 years later I am adjusting well. I no longer dream about American food and settle for beans and rice willingly. I am learning even to like it. I settle for a fan instead of A/C and 5 channels on television instead of 500. I have the same clothes I came with and though I can see through most of them I am grateful to have more than 2 outfits because most villagers don’t.  My old shoes have been taken for repair more than once but I am happy to give the Shoe Repair shop a job and an income.  I know it won’t always be this way. God always has a plan. The ministry is trying to start an income generating project and my husband, the ministry director, may start receiving some kind of income after working 4 years without anything.



….……Yeah, I may one day find a nice spot to sit and sip a warm drink and read something……..but only if I can find the time out of just surviving in Africa ………………………




Saturday, February 4, 2017

Quarterly report for October-December 2016

Greetings to all our members, board members, volunteers and all the well- wishers. This is a report from October to December 2016. This includes the activities, challenges and way forward.

WHATS NEW?
-Our first university-level sponsored student graduated.
- Two of our Primary-level kids sat for their P.L.E. exams.
- We successfully renewed our Operation Permit for Mityana Municipality.

ACTIVITIES

1.     EVANGLISM

We attended the Speech Day Namamonde village in Mityana Municipality. The children entertained the audience and we passed the message of God to them and their parents present at the function.

Director Okumu Stephen speaking a message about HIV/AIDS awareness.

Students performing



Students dancing for the visitors

School director Mubiru Micheal



EDUCATION
One of our sponsored students Isaac was able to successfully graduate from Busitema University, Uganda with a Bachelors Degree in Environmental Science. Two of our Primary-level sponsored pupils Crispus and Sharon also finally sat for their Primary Leaving Examination (P.L.E.) and are now awaiting their results.  Our other sponsored primary level kids finished the year successfully and are now enjoying a well deserved break until Feb. 2017.




3.     POULTRY PROJECT
We have continued saving the donated funds for the poultry house roof. We postponed the date for traveling to the village from January to February 2017 due to a shortage of funds to meet the building and materials bid.  We want to thank Micheal Tulk again for his continued support of this project.

4.     CHRISTMAS SHARING
We received some donations from the U.S. to provide food and gifts to some families in Mityana and Asuret Sub-county. We distributed these items to needy families and shared the love of God.
Giving donated gifts to local children
Giving rice and meat to needy families





 VOLUNTEERS
Our volunteers have continued sending packages in the mail for the children; especially in Mityana and Soroti districts respectively. Many children are excited to receive gifts of backpacks, pens, other scholastic materials, toys, whistles, clothes, shoes, sweets and more. Some volunteers from U.K. have helped with school fees for some children. We hope to partner with them in the new year to continue supporting them through 2017. There are still many more who need help with school fees and supplies and we call upon those who are interested in changing the life of a child to join us in this cause.  We thank our volunteer Carla Ann Diliberti for her dedication in rehabilitating malnourished children in Mityana.

Donated gifts from USA
Carla's clan



Faith and her dad receiving gifts from Ireland


Godfrey receiving his gift from Jill in U.K.

Patricia receiving her lovely gifts from Jill in U.K. 



          
 CHALLENGES
-We still need more sponsors for school fees for the children.
-We will still need funds to buy chickens after finishing the building, pay the workers for the start, chicken feed, employee training, veterinary costs, transportation costs, etc.
-We are yet to know the Soroti District work permit for the poultry project.
-Rent is still expensive.
-Lack of reliable transportation is still a problem for the ministry.

WAY FORWARD
-Continue networking with friends locally and abroad.
-We will have a fundraising period starting on Facebook and Whatsapp to raise awareness and support for the start-up costs for the poultry project. We call on all our family and friends to “Chip in for a Chick”.
-We will renew the Soroti operation permit in February 2017.
We really want to thank all those who have contributed to the children through praying for, sending packages and paying school fees.  Special thanks goes to our friend Mick who has focused on making sure the poultry building stands. We have you all in our hearts and may God bless you!

Okumu Stephen

Principal Director



FINANCIAL REPORT FOR OCTOBER TO DECEMBER 2016
Expenses:
Rent                     1,050,000 ugx
Entertainment       167,500 ugx
Water                      126,000 ugx
Electricity                450,000 ugx
Volunteer               450,000 ugx
Fees                      1,140,000 ugx
Permit                       40,000 ugx
Postage                     65,000 ugx
Christmas               110,000 ugx
Stationary                12,000 ugx
Evangelism              30,000 ugx
Poultry                           NIL
GRAND TOTAL: 3, 640,500 ugx   ($1,040 US)

Foreign Donation ($726 US)  Local Donation ($313 US)   TOTAL- $1039


RESERVED FOR POULTRY 3, 100,000 ($1,114 US)