PATRIZIA School Buyamba

The community of Buyamba is located in southern Uganda, not far from Lake Victoria, in one of the poorest countries in the world. The PATRIZIA School Buyamba offers children aged five to fourteen a quality primary school education from Year 1 to Year 7. More than 900 pupils attend the school, making it one of the largest primary schools in the region.

The children in this area face significant economic and social challenges, including limited access to basic resources such as water and electricity. Their families struggle with economic downturns, unemployment and maintaining their cultural identity.

The school has been a PATRIZIA KinderHaus since 2010 and was reopened after extensive renovation and expansion with the partner Grünhelme e.V. (Rupert Neudeck) and funding from the PATRIZIA Foundation. The school was extended to include dormitories, teacher accommodation and a new kitchen. This provides the children with warm meals and gives children from more remote villages access to education. Today, the school is characterised by a high standard of education in an extremely poor region.

”All pupils at St. Francis have now access to clean water, wash their hands regularly. We have had no cases of waterborne disease this school term. Before the intervention, at least 2 out of 10 pupils had a disease associated with poor hygiene and lack of water. Thank you for supporting water harvesting.”

Denis Kalyango
School projects coordinator of the Masaka Diocese

Continued commitment

After the initial measures were completed in 2010, the PATRIZIA Foundation’s involvement did not end, but will continue as part of the long-term partnership in order to generate the greatest possible impact and support further development in the long term.
The school received a new sanitary facility in 2014 and new water tanks were purchased and installed in 2015.

The restoration of proper school operations after the coronavirus pandemic and the sharp rise in pupil numbers presented the school with major challenges once again in 2021. That is why the PATRIZIA Foundation, in cooperation with the Masaka Diocesan School Organisation and ADEPT e.V., provided significant support to the school in renovating nine existing classrooms and the dormitories with the associated sanitary facilities. In addition, two further classrooms and a new toilet facility were built and the kitchen was extensively renovated and extended. The installation of two water filter systems to treat clean drinking water free from pathogens and contamination was also particularly important.

During the coronavirus pandemic, Uganda closed its schools across the country for almost two years before they were reopened under strict conditions. In the first year of the pandemic, the foundation had already started to support the school with emergency aid measures using funds from the Corona Relief Fund. In 2021, further measures were implemented in this context, such as the installation of new water tanks and the purchase of hand-washing stations, soap and clinical thermometers. An important part of the emergency aid was also the financing of school fees for three months and salaries for teachers and administrative staff for four months. A total of around 745 children and young people and 13 employees benefited from this emergency aid.

Watch the video. Read also Vincent’s Story of Change, Rachel’s Story of Change and the travel reports by our Project Manager Kristian Bollmann and by our Senior Manager for Donor Relations Jowita Fuchshofer.

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Watch the video for more information about the PATRIZIA School Buyamba

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Stories of Change in Buyamba

Vincent’s* Story of Change

 

Vincent’s great role model is his sister. The 19-year-old studies medicine. Like her, the 13-year-old wants to become a doctor and heal the sick. His greatest wish is to make sure that not so many people in his country are infected with preventable diseases anymore. “So if I help a person later as a doctor, it may be that I save a whole family.”

Vincent grew up with his grandparents. Because they live far away from the PATRIZIA School Buyamba, he now lives here at the boarding school. When he finishes primary school, he hopes to be able to transfer to a secondary school and then study. Because Vincent already knows today that with his diligence and commitment he has it in his own hands to fulfil his career aspirations.

*Name changed

Rachel’s Story of Change

 

Rachel is in the seventh form at PATRIZIA Primary School in Buyamba. The fact that the 14-year-old is even able to attend the school is not to be taken for granted; both of her parents passed away when she was a toddler.

Since then, she and her three sisters have been living with their uncle, who looks after the girls and is even making it possible for them to go to school. Rachel is also extremely fortunate that there’s even a school where she lives, that it’s affordable and that she can get there on foot. PATRIZIA Primary School is five kilometres from where Rachel lives.

She’s so happy that the school is so close. As well as receiving an education at the school, she also gets two meals a day. She has also become part of the social network at the school and – unlike other girls of her age – doesn’t have to work at the local market or help run the household. “Rachel strikes us as an extremely appreciative girl who’s keen to help, and she’s fully aware of how amazingly fortunate she has.

She’s currently completing her last year at primary school, and her dream is to move up to secondary school. We really hope her dream comes true,” says Jowita Fuchshofer.

Travel report: School visit to the PATRIZIA School Buyamba

The PATRIZIA Foundation has been working in Uganda since 2009 to give children in one of the poorest countries in the world access to education, and we have already facilitated several extensive renovation projects at the PATRIZIA Buyamba School. It was high time for a personal visit to the primary school in southern Uganda, where we met the management team, explored further opportunities for cooperation and spent time with the children.

Find out more in the 2022 travel report by Kristian Bollmann or in the 2019 travel report by Jowita Fuchshofer.

So poor and yet so rich

 

The PATRIZIA Foundation has been working in Uganda since 2009 as part of an ongoing commitment to ensure children have access to education in one of the poorest countries in the world. In 2009, 2010 and 2014 we made it possible for major renovation work to be carried out at PATRIZIA School Buyamba. High time for a personal visit to the primary school in southern Uganda, where we met the management team, explored further collaboration options and spent time with the children. Senior manager of donor relations Jowita Fuchshofer reports back on her foundation trip.

Jowita Fuchshofer visits the PATRIZIA School Buyamba 

The foundation had been talking and messaging with one of our local contacts, Father Charles Mbazzi, for months and it was Father Charles who picked me and my two travel companions up at Entebbe Airport. Father Charles is a board member of the school committee. PATRIZIA School Buyamba is located on church grounds not far from his parish home. It is state-funded and run by the church.

On the five-hour drive to Buyamba, Father Charles suggested we make a stop to meet his superior, the bishop of the diocese of Masaka. If we were honest, we were tired after the long flight, but naturally we agreed. During the meeting with the bishop we found Father Charles very friendly.

He is an extremely devoted man and was humble in his dealings with his superior. Eye contact and shaking hands were only allowed upon request. After the official meeting, we were invited to sign the bishop’s guest book.

Green fields and young people

 

One thing we were struck by us is how green Uganda is! Buyamba itself is a small village with two main areas of activity. One is the market square with various stalls offering goods from the region.The other is the school in Buyamba. It is common in Uganda for families to have lots of children: 73 per cent of the population are under 30. You don’t see hotels or tourists in the area. We were put up in the parish hall.

We first visited PATRIZIA School Buyamba the next morning. We could already hear singing from the school choir from afar, chanting welcome, welcome, you are very welcome. 

When we arrived, the students all lined up for us and gave us an unbelievably warm welcome, dancing for us and clapping their hands. As a representative of the foundation, I was invited onto the stage to greet everyone and express our gratitude for the lovely reception.

The following exchange with the headteacher, Sylvia Nalusuuna, was informative for me and extremely fruitful. We find it very important to meet as partners of equals so we can have an open discussion about mutual needs and wishes – as was the case this time. Our conversation gave great insights, about how the teacher work the the students and the essentials about their education program.

PATRIZIA School Buyamba: one school for the entire region

 

We were delighted to find the school in good condition and lessons taking place according to the timetable. Despite this, we discovered that with 882 pupils at the school, classes for children aged five to 14 are totally overfilled. Schools are scarce in the region and children are eager to learn, so they gladly walk up to six miles a day just to attend the school. There is no public transport. As a result, the school accommodates boarders in two dormitories. Pupils who board at the school receive additional lessons, sometimes until 9pm.

School fees are often an obstacle

 

The school fees are 20,000 Ugandan shillings per term, which is around $4.50. Each school year last three terms with short or long holidays in between.

The annual GDP in Uganda is $747 per person, so for some parents paying the annual school fee of $13.50 is a real struggle. Hardly anyone has employment in Buyamba. Most of the local population live from working the land or manual labour.

The dormitories house around 100 boarders, although they were only intended for 80 children. The school has now also introduced improvised pre-school lessons for children aged four and upwards in a separate area of the dining hall. Because all primary school instruction is in English, this preparatory year is important so children can acquire the necessary language skills. A separate building for pre-schoolers would solve the acute space problem. The director also sees a need for a wall around the school buildings to protect the children (mainly from wild animals but also from theft).

Poor but still happy

 

We encountered poverty everywhere during our visit. Many children have no shoes to wear, their school uniforms are ripped or do not fit properly.

As in many parts of Africa, drinking water is a problem and there are no wells. This makes the three rainwater collection tanks all the more important, two of which were donated by the foundation.

The tanks provide the school with drinking water and water for 

personal hygiene and laundry, not just for all the students but also the parish home. All pupils own one ballpoint pen, but apart from that they have no real personal possessions to speak of. But this is not something the children worry about. On the contrary: we noticed how much value they place in the community, always helping each other and sharing generously with others. They seemed happy and were always very open and interested in us.

‘Jowit’ visits the classroom

 

We were allowed to attend some lessons and even shared porridge with the students during first break. It is very nutritious and for children who don’t get breakfast at home, it’s the first meal of the day. The breaks seemed to be all about one thing: play, play, play – with the new balls we brought with us or toys we designed ourselves. I also told the children stories from Germany with the help of our mascot, Hope, and even taught them a couple of German words. Suddenly all I heard was “Jowit! Jowit!”. That was the little ones’ name for me, constantly seeking my company and time and again shyly coming up to me to hand me personal letters.

Long-term help works well

 

My original thought was to take sweets with me for the children – instant gratification. But thinking about it, long-term help is so much more important. It was clear from the conversations we had with our local partners that we are doing the right things together. PATRIZIA School Buyamba offers a whole host of opportunities to intensify our partnership. As a foundation, we will continue to focus on ensuring that the students lack nothing in terms of infrastructure so they can concentrate fully on their school education.