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Quarterly
Visits
UKF conducts quarterly visits to the orphanages we support,
the purpose of the visits is to deliver groceries and
other supplies needed to ensure well being of the children
and staff. The visits also provide a great opportunity
to get first hand information on ad hoc needs or problems
encountered at these facilities. For instance, during
one of our quarterly visits to the Lagos State Motherless
Babies Home in 2005, we discovered that nine (9) of
the children would not be enrolled in school for the
new school session due to lack of funds, we therefore
paid the school fees for these children directly to
the school.
Festive Period Activities
UKF is conscious of the psychological impact of poor
and orphaned children being left out of the massive
festive activities during major religious holidays in
Nigeria, therefore we strive to extend the love and
celebration to them. UKF organizes Christmas parties
for the children at the Lagos Motherless Babies Home,
the Children Transit Home and the Hearts of Gold Children’s
Hospice. In addition, we sew new clothes for the children
at Bab Es Salaam Orphanage during the Eid Fitr (end
of Ramadan fasting celebration) and organize a party
at their facility during the Eid Kabir holiday.
Children Transit Home (CTH) Rehabilitation Project
This facility has been the most challenging of all the
orphanages we have taken up. CTH is a state owned institution,
which houses orphaned children between the ages of 3
and 10 who are awaiting adoption. The facility has suffered
extreme neglect with poor sanitary and living conditions.
However, in less than one year, UKF has provided an
overhead water tank with an inbuilt water purifier to
supply clean and portable water, installed ceiling fans
in bedrooms and offices, continuously provided a monthly
supply of charcoal for cooking as we found this to be
a more cost effective measure than the use of gas, deepened
existing water well, evacuated and reconstructed soak
away pit/ repaired waste water lines, repaired portable
water network - taps, pipes, elbows etc and repaired/re-installed
faulty pumping machine.
United for Kids Foundation Education Project (UKFEP)
at the CTH
As UKF became more involved with CTH, we discovered
the apparent lack of investment in the children’s
education. The orphans seemed to acquire no formal education
while awaiting adoption, the older children who were
not adopted were sent off to learn vocational skills
and sent into the ‘World’ when they reached
18 years of age, this situation definitely placed these
children at a disadvantage. In 2006, a Christian church
in Lagos employed five teachers to provide some formal
education for the children. UKF supported this effort
and renovated two kindergarten classrooms, provided
classroom furniture (desks, chairs, curtains, trash
cans and carpets), educational materials (text and note
books, white boards, learning aids and other supplies)
to aid conducive learning atmosphere.
Ikeja General Hospital (IGH) Monthly Visits
One of the most rewarding activities to UKF members
is the monthly visit to the Ikeja General Hospital Children’s
wards. The visit which begins at 9am on the third Saturday
of every month aims to bring succor to families who
suffer the dual misfortune of sickness and poverty.
UKF provides various supplies including diapers and
formulas (for infants), chocolate beverage, milk, tissue
paper, bathing soaps, drinks/juice and biscuits for
older patients. The patients’ needs are overwhelming
but impossible to neglect, therefore our monthly spending
on groceries at IGH has increased from NGN15,000 ($115)
in 2002 to NGN100,000 ($769) in 2006.
In addition to the supply of groceries, UKF donates
cash to parents of patients who are unable to afford
much needed prescription drugs and medical procedures
required to restore their health.
Patients Pre/Post-Recovery Support/Assistance
During our monthly visits to IGH, we endeavor to look
beyond the immediate needs of the patients and strive
to, within our means provide financial and other support
needed by the patients and their families to live more
comfortably while undergoing treatment and upon their
discharge. During one of our visits in 2004, we met
Deborah, a 6 year old amputee living with her grand
parents in a village in Ibafo Ogun State. UKF paid for
Deborah’s prosthesis at Igbobi hospital, visited
the family in Ogun State upon her discharge and have
been investing in food, school fees and other needs
to ensure that Deborah and her family live more comfortably.
In 2005, we met Ariyo, a 10 year old Urology patient
who, together with his mother had been in physical and
emotional pains since he got hit in the rear by a car
in 2004. Ariyo requires surgery, which cannot be performed
in Nigeria, UKF has invested in Ariyo’s well being
by paying for medication and school fees. We have also
procured international passports for Ariyo and his mother
and linked them with Urologists in the UK and USA to
ensure that he gets the treatment required.
Hearts of Gold (HOG) Children’s Hospice
HOG is one of the most brilliant ideas we have encountered
since 2002. It is a privately owned hospice catering
for orphaned children with medical challenges such as
Cerebral palsy, Hydrocephalus and HIV/AIDS. UKF’s
focus has shifted from providing groceries and supplies
to assisting the hospice with payment of staff salaries
and completing its critical building expansion, UKF
has donated building materials and cash worth over NGN500,000
towards this expansion project. We were extremely honored
and humbled to be presented with a Humanitarian award
at the Hospice’s award ceremony in MUSON Center,
Lagos on October 2006.
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