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Kids for Kids

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Kids for Kids is a British nonprofit charity formed in 2001 to help children struggling to survive in remote villages in Darfur, Sudan. It is the only charity created specifically to help the children of Darfur. It has been previously listed in the top three UK charities for the International Development Charity of the Year at the UK Charity Awards.[1] As of October 2021, it has provided aid to over 384,000 people.

The charity was founded by Patricia Parker MBE to support children who are facing hardship in remote villages of Darfur. Kids for Kids provides long term self-sustainable projects, identified by the communities themselves and, uniquely, run by them. Projects are designed to prevent small problems from becoming disasters.

The original inspiration for the charity was a chance meeting between Parker and a nine-year-old Sudanese child from the village of Um Ga'al who was struggling across the desert in the immense heat of Darfur, to fetch water for his brothers and sisters. It was a walk that took him seven hours, and then he faced the long walk back. The water he collected would also be used to keep three goats alive—their milk was the children's only source of protein, minerals and vitamins.

About Kids for Kids

Kids for Kids supports grass roots projects that communities identify as the most effective way of enabling them to help themselves.

Many Kids for Kids pumps are treasured as a living memorial for someone who has died, or to celebrate something special. In some areas, where hand pumps prove that there is plentiful water, they can be converted to submersible solar powered pumps which will help many people. Kids for Kids also trains midwives due to the lack of healthcare in the villages. When there is obstructed labour, a common complication in a region where female genital mutilation is widespread, rope delivery is the only form of help. The charity trains first aid workers who treat simple wounds, teach hygiene and even build latrines and provides veterinary care to all the animals in each village. Additionally, Kids for Kids trains people in farming techniques and water harvesting, provides donkeys—the only transport in a region where there are no roads—donkey ploughs, carts and water carts, farm tools and seeds, blankets, mosquito nets and other household essentials—and, most importantly, the provides and repairs hand pumps. Long term improvement of the environment, the planting of trees, is another priority, and forms another source of income for families.

An extensive tree planting campaign has been funded since 2006, with a Demonstration Garden in the main Tree Nursery in El Fasher, where trees planted back in 2006 are now tall enough to give shade and where people come to picnic at weekends. Kids for Kids has also funded a new Midwives Training School in El Fasher where they fund the training of 40 village midwives each year. But the Key project is a Goat Loan. The poorest 15 percent of families in each Kids for Kids village is lent six goats to provide milk immediately for the children and to enable mothers to have a livelihood as the little flock multiplies. At the end of two years six goats are passed on to another poor family, and so on. Eventually the whole community benefits from this simple, life changing, loan. It has been called the best Microfinance project ever. To ensure that the projects are sustainable and there is clear accountability, the management of the projects is carried out by village committees which are trained in book keeping—but, most importantly, they are accountable to their own communities. This has ensured that the projects have survived even during the worst periods of violence.

Kids for Kids works directly with villagers with the help of one of the most prominent veterinary doctors in Darfur, Dr Salim Ahmed Salim. Dr Salim has been appointed Kids for Kids Programme Manager and, with Project Manager Hassan Mihisi works on projects which include hand pumps, first aid workers, midwives and blankets and mosquito nets as well as tree projects and the new Kindergarten Projects which commenced with the first in Abu Nahla, a remote village northeast of the regional capital, El Fasher. Various communities have said that the Kids for Kids simple integrated projects—the loan of goats and donkeys, training of midwives and para-vets and much more—are enabling them to stay in their homes.[2]

In February 2005 Patricia Parker and her son were abducted by rebels in Darfur but subsequently released unharmed.[3] At one point during the abduction the leader of the rebels shouted: ‘Don’t you understand that I could have you killed at any moment?’ but Parker kept smiling and I said: ‘Of course I do—but I also know about Sudanese hospitality and I know that I am perfectly safe’. They were released the following morning.[4] Kids for Kids went on to adopt this village, Kulkul, and is now providing a range of sustainable projects to the families and helping them out of poverty.

In 2013, in response to the appeal of hundreds of women in Darfur, Kids for Kids opened its first Kindergarten at Abu Nahla. This was one of the first brick buildings in the village and includes latrines, a veranda (shade and an extra classroom) a water tank and fruit trees. Kids for Kids worked closely with the State Ministry of Education which is funding the kindergarten's teacher. The Director of the State Ministry of Education said that it is the first school of its kind in Darfur. There are currently nine kindergartens in villages in Darfur that are fully equipped with toys for both indoor and outdoor use. Other schools are in Abu Digeise (supported by Joanna Lumley OBE) Azagarfa (supported by City of London School), Um Ga'al, Kindro, Hillat Hamid, Siwailinga, Golo C and Sakori. As a result, every village in Darfur has since requested help from Kids for Kids in the building of their own kindergartens.

In 2021, Kids for Kids adopted five new villages where it has committed to providing the package of basic projects aimed at improving lives on the long-term. Indirect benefits such as tomatoes and okra now flourish where once there was nothing but sand. However in 2018, a famine broke out in Darfur because of the failed harvest. Combined with the rising inflation of the Sudanese pound to a third of its previous value, the loss of their subsistence crops has threatened the work achieved by the charity.

Notable Supporters and Patrons

Kids for Kids has been mentioned with approval in debates in the House of Lords[5] and other notable supporters include Ruth Rendell, Alastair Stewart, Miriam Margolyes, Timothy West, and Javier Solana who donated half his Carnegie-Wateler Peace Prize money to them in 2007.[6]

Kids for Kids Patrons include Julie Etchingham, Joanna Lumley OBE FRGS, Lord Cope of Berkeley PC, Eamonn Holmes OBE and Sir William Patey KCMG.[7]

Kids for Kids in the News

References

  1. ^ "Page not found - Charity Awards 2015". charityawards.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2007-05-09. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  2. ^ "The Latest News from the UK and Around the World".
  3. ^ "Embassy of Sudan in Kenya". sudanembassynrb.org.
  4. ^ http://www.kidsforkids.org.uk/pdfs/times.pdf Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine Profile in The Times November 16, 2006
  5. ^ "Lords Hansard text for 13 Jul 2004 (240713-01)". parliament.uk.
  6. ^ "Welcome to Kids for Kids The charity that helps children in Darfur, Sudan". kidsforkids.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2007-09-07.
  7. ^ "Birthday celebrations for Kids For Kids 20 years of providing real lasting help – sustainability in practise - Sudan | ReliefWeb". reliefweb.int. Retrieved 2022-10-20.
  8. ^ Not only People are Dying in Darfur Mail & Guardian online 18-Oct-2004