The Great Jewellery Sale for Guardian Network Africa

Looking good…doing great…

The Guardian Network Africa is launching another big jewellery sale with prices slashed to less than a third their original price!

PLUS – Get a FREE pearl ring with orders over £35- subject to stock availability!

Tourmaline Heart Pendant necklace

A huge thank you to our generous donor who donated loads of beautiful jewellery and ladies’ accessories for us to raise funds to sponsor the education of underprivileged children in Cameroon. Now we need to turn this donation into cash and that’s where you come in!

From delicate creamy cultured pearl necklaces to iridescent freshwater pearl sets, interspersed with shell and diamante all at ridiculously low prices – a steal for the savvy pearl lover.

And if you are a fan of gems and semi-precious stones, there’s a breath-taking selection of necklaces and bracelets made of turquoise, jade, coral guaranteed to provide satisfaction to its owner and even a set of lustre beads interspersed by antique silver rings that will make a perfect match for a classy evening wear.

Ethnic jewellery lovers would not miss out! We have a stunning silver bead set crafted using silversmith technology that was developed by the Zuni Indians of North America over 100 years ago! And also, hand made necklaces, earrings and bangles from South Africa that mix ancient and modern design in finest grade copper.

Hand made copper bangle from South Africa

Plus, ladies’ summer tops, scarves, lovely handbags leather belts with interchangeable buckles…all available here.

Treat yourself or someone you love with one of these. And what’s more, you’ll be doing good in the process! Thanks to you purchase, a child’s life will be improved for the better through education. Order now.

The Guardian Network becomes the Guardian Network Africa!

The name of our organisation has been changed to the Guardian Network Africa, to give more emphasis to the geographical region our charity impacts. We even have a new domain name for this: www.guardiannetworkafrica.org!

We are constantly finding ways to improve our charity so that we can reach out to more compassionate people who can join us in our mission to sponsor education for poor children in Africa. These children are excluded from school just because they are born into poor families that just cannot afford to pay their school fees.

We have also been listening to your comments and our communications team has made numerous changes to our website to incorporate all your suggestions! Check out the new pictures we have added of our team members who work so hard to power our mission, and their profiles. Now you can see who you are actually talking to! Meet Nguh Akum, our new Field Operations Co-ordinator who swiftly stepped in to help us manage our growing sponsorship activities in Cameroon, Africa.

Nguh Akum - our new Fields Operations Coordinator in Cameroon

You can also read Judith Tamasang’s fascinating story of how the Guardian Network Africa was started.

A few months ago when we just built our website, we solicited help from PR Partners, Harrogate-based journalists that help small businesses raise their public profile through social media and networking, and Rebecca Parsley was delighted to give us an intensive, one-to-one social media session for charity! We have used these online tools and can now update our sponsors and supporters on all the important events and activities as they happen through our new Facebook and Twitter pages. Our sponsors can now publicly share their experience with their sponsored child; our supporters can share their thoughts and suggestions; and our team members in Africa, Europe and America can share their experience on the field across continents!

Thank you Rebecca – you have contributed massively to our progress!

We take your feedback very seriously. Tell us what  could be improved on our media sites. Become our fan on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.

The Guardian Network Africa: who we are

About Us

We are a non-profit organisation, consisting of a network of individuals all over the world that share the common interest in helping to sponsor education for underprivileged children in Africa. We reach out and help some of the poorest and most vulnerable children achieve something great in their lives. We firmly believe both in the power of education to change lives and also in the compassion and willingness of those more fortunate, to reach out to fellow humans who need help.

Our Mission

We believe that education is a sure route out of poverty.  We want to give poor children a chance an equal chance to dream and express their minds; a chance to acquire knowledge and skills; a chance to become somebody who can give back to their community. We want to empower them with education - the tool that can foster the much needed development in Africa.

Helping children one at a time through education

Our operational model

We identify children that are precluded from school due to poverty and sponsor their education by paying for their tuition fees and exam registration fees. We also provide them with basic school stationery, text books and a school uniform.

We are unique in that we link each of our sponsors with the child/children they are sponsoring and provide periodic feedback on the children’s progress at school. Our sponsors can therefore enjoy a much closer and satisfying relationship with the children they sponsor than other bigger and similar organisations can provide.

100% of sponsorship money goes to the sponsored child. Our everyday running cost is covered through private donations and contributions.

The following are our ground policies and values expected of each member:

  • Passion in our mission
  • Transparency in our activities.
  • Commitment in our duties and roles.
  • Mutual respect for one another.

We may not make all the difference, but we can start, one child at a time. Join us today or support our cause.

The Guardian Network sponsored children shine in exam results.

Blaise and Limunga pass final exam with flying colours!

It’s so rewarding to give such positive feedback about the children that the Guardian Network sponsor and the news from Cameroon could not have been better!

Motale Blaise, Mwambo Magdalene and Nadege all sat their common entrance exam in their final year of primary school and we can report that all of these great children passed with flying colours so enabling them to gain admission into secondary school.

Orock- our local child support manager passed this happy news to us and asked that we pass the great news onto the kind sponsors that have enabled these three children to go to school and get the education that will change their lives forever.

Orock was particularly elated with the success achieved by Motale Blaise who came out as best student in his exam centre. “He was so proud and happy”, said Orock; “he had the biggest smile on his face that I have ever seen and he asked me to thank his sponsor very much”. Blaise was at risk of not sitting for the common exams because his mother could not afford to pay for his education. The Guardian Network found him a sponsor – Kate.

The success of these children has inspired the Guardian Network to reach out to more children and to continue sponsoring their education. We urgently need more support for our work as we continue to reach out to more children who are precluded from going to school to get that vital education.

Nadesh equally had excellent results in her final year exam.

If you would like to help, please visit our website today to see how you can get involved.

Why has malaria not been eradicated from Africa as it has been done in Western countries?

How can we stop malaria from killing more of our children

It is no longer news that poverty, corruption and lack of education are the common factors that most African countries share. These vices do not only impinge on the underprivileged people, they equally affect the governments and the nation as a whole. Together they form the biggest barrier to social and economic development in Africa today.

Recently, the Guardian Network Africa sampled friends’ opinions as to why they think malaria has not been eradicated from Africa as it has been successfully done in Western countries. Their responses were profound and what we got was more than an education on the subject!

Malaria is a disease caused by a parasite that is transmitted by mosquitoes. According to the Roll Back Malaria partnership (RBM), malaria causes about one million deaths around the world every year. Last year, 91% of these deaths occurred in Africa, of which 85% were children under the age of 5. In fact, every 45 seconds a child dies of malaria in Africa.

Most people were of the opinion that the hot tropical weather in Africa, which is suitable for mosquito breeding, coupled with the poor hygienic conditions of African’s environment is the reason for the spread and persistence of malaria so far. According to them, prevention through improved hygiene would be the way forward to eradicate malaria from Africa.

Meanwhile, Munoh Kenne Foma – a medical doctor in Cameroon, provided us with a more in-depth historical journey on the previous attempts made by WHO to eradicate malaria worldwide. He went as far back as 1942, where their attempts had been successful in other countries but not Africa due to insecticide resistance by the mosquitoes, followed by chloroquine resistance by the malaria parasite. Further attempts to fight malaria dwindled.

In the late 90’s, the insufferable scourge of malaria in Africa could no longer be ignored. This prompted the United Nations to join in the fight against malaria with the Roll Back malaria partnership programme, to help African countries forestall malaria’s impending population annihilation. The Abuja summit in 2000 was attended by 44 of the 50 malaria-affected countries and their leaders resolved that by 2005, at least 60% of malaria sufferers  would get prompt access to treatment while 60% of those at high risk (including pregnant women and children under the age of 5) would have access to treated mosquito nets and affordable treatment. The goal was to half the malaria death rate by 2010, one that was later buoyed up by the world leaders at the G8 Okinawa summit in 2000.

25th April 2010 (World Malaria day) marked ten years since these resolutions and pledges were taken by African leaders and yet, malaria death rate has not decreased. In fact, death rates in Africa may have increased since then! And hence, the inevitable question.

So why has there not been a follow through of the action plans set?

RBM reckons over 10% of the average African household’s annual income is spent on preventing or treating malaria. Malaria costs African countries 15% of their national budget (Abuja declaration).  Another medical doctor we communicated with mentioned that where he works, in Douala- a coastal town in Cameroon, some people are so poor that they use the free mosquito nets they have been given for their protection against mosquito bites as fishing nets! So, is poverty the reason why malaria eradication is seemingly impossible in Africa?

Or can it be blamed on corruption – on individuals who redirect public funds to their private accounts?

Or perhaps it is the lack of education of Africans on the gravity of the problem, its impact on the society and the dire need for individual responsibility and cooperation in the struggle against malaria?

Interestingly, someone suggested a conspiracy theory, whereby organisations involved with the fight against malaria are not taking any serious actions to solve Africa’s plight so that big pharmaceutical companies can maintain their biggest market for their drug sales. They illustrated by saying that when it comes to vaccine development projects, funding from these organisations are limited, if not fictional. And yet, this could probably be the most efficient malaria preventive, if encouraged.

Whatever the real reason for the persistence of malaria in Africa, the Guardian Network Africa is of the opinion that poverty, corruption and lack of education are flagrantly lurking in the background, and play a major role in the failure to eradicate malaria from Africa till date. However, Africa can no longer rely entirely on others to clean up the mess within their homes!

In yet another desperate attempt to control malaria, African leaders reconvened and formed a new coalition –African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA) with the optimistic goal of stopping deaths caused by malaria in Africa by 2015. This sounds hopeful, especially under the auspices of Obama’s global health initiative, which supports investments in global programs that fight against diseases that kill children, including malaria. But could this possibly be an acknowledgement by African leaders that malaria is unstoppable and so, it is better to rather control its fatality? Nonetheless, for this goal to be achieved there needs to be a sustained commitment on the part of both African leaders and African people.

So, resounding president Obama’s words in his recent visit to Accra, Ghana, “Africa’s future is up to Africans”.  It is time for us to take our future into our own hands and shape our destiny.

Could the ALMA summit be another overly zealous goal? What can be done to eradicate malaria from Africa?

Are great skills natural or derived through an education?

Yesterday, I happened on a documentary on ITV entitled: “Superhuman: Genius”  which revealed some people with stunning talents including child prodigies.  Among the case studies, was a man who could memorise a pack of cards in just a few seconds and recall the correct order of the cards in the whole pack in less than 26 seconds. This thirty-something-year-old started training himself to do this in his mid-twenties and has been pushing himself further ever since to beat his own previous records.

Another character was a ten-year old boy who was made to listen to classical music tapes for most hours of the day, right from the day he was born by his non-musical parents. They actually bought him a piano because they had read some research paper which mentioned that children had a high ability to learn just about anything especially if they were taught from a very early age. So by the age of ten, their son, was not just a pianist but also composer, was so good that he was playing alongside famous artists and jazz orchestras.

On the other hand, there was child who was too clever for primary school. From the age of six, he randomly picked up chemistry textbook and could understand the processes. Encouraged by his dad in the field, by the age of eight, he was attending practical laboratory lessons with third year university students. He seemed to have a natural flair in the practical and clearly understood the science behind the experiments.

Furthermore, there was the story of a girl who started painting amazing pictures from the age of four, and by thirteen, she had became the sole bread winner in her family through the sales of her arts.

I can only think of two reasons why these characters are so impossibly skilled:  education (the fellow with an unusually strong memory and the child musician) or natural talent (the child chemist and painter).  While the third and last cases, to me, were the true super humans i.e. obviously had God-given or mysterious talents, the first two cases confirm my thoughts that anyone can be trained to a skill and will become very efficient even if they did not have the natural talent. A good example is football players trained from young and for long. Another example is you – the skill you learn from your job to become a professional. In most cases, you don’t have them naturally. I call this skills derived from an education.

The child musician is a strong illustration of how child education can yield great skills and achievements, especially when encouraged or sponsored. His musical talent was forced to develop and nurtured right from birth and the result was a remarkable skill and an unquestionable path to success.

Of course, we may possess both types of skills in different aspects. But whether the skills we have are natural or derived, in my mind one thing is sure: they can be lost if they are not nurtured, encouraged or sponsored.

How do you think education can be translated into a useful set of skills that can be used for both personal and community development? The Guardian Network Africa would like to hear you opinions.

24th May 2010

New success stories for 2010

We are happy to announce that two more young people, Nadesh and George, have now been included to our success stories thanks to two generous individuals who have accepted to sponsor them. And also, thanks to the efforts of our local representative in Cameroon, Orock, who finds these underprivileged kids.

But there are more kids that need help. Please contact us and join our network of friends to become the “Guardian” of one of these children in dire need of education. www.theguardiannetwork.co.uk

If you feel that you cannot sponsor a child at the moment, there are other ways to help us or get involved. Make a donation, tell your friends about us or organise a fundraising event like we did: www.wix.com/guardiannetwork/Guardian-Network-Accessory-Sale

Any help you can give will go a long way to change a child’s life.

Thank you.

Judith Tamasang (founder)

Meet Nadesh…

Nadesh is a very intelligent orphan who always tops her class. Yet, she was forced to drop out of school when her only sponsor, her aunt, died last year – 2009.

Fortunately, our local representative Orock, found her and she is about to experience a life changing opportunity. Read more about Nadesh here.

The curious case of George…

The curious case of George

George’s childhood was stolen at the tender age of 11 when his parents died, leaving him with two younger siblings. Due to the ill-treatment he subsequently suffered at the hands of family members, George had to resort to an extremely bold and courageous decision that cost him his entire childhood.

We felt the need to give George the opportunity he was so unjustly denied. Read more on George’s story here.

The Guardian Network: Who Are We?

WHO WE ARE

The Guardian Network is a non-profit organisation that helps sponsor education for underprivileged children in Africa. We are an ambitious organisation that has very little financial resource, but a great desire to give back to the world and to reach out and help some of the poorest and vulnerable children achieve something great in their lives. We firmly believe both in the power of education to change lives and also in the compassion and willingness of those more fortunate to reach out to fellow humans who need help.

Most families, who survive on an income of less than £1 a day, cannot afford to send their children to school and the dramatic increase in orphans and vulnerable children, due to poverty, disability and HIV/AIDS, has overwhelmed the capacity of extended families to care for those children.

We believe that education is a sure route through which children can escape poverty in Africa. We want to give poor children a chance to dream and express their minds, like any child should; a chance to acquire knowledge and skills; a chance to be somebody who can give back to their community. We want to empower them with education - the tool that can foster the much needed development in Africa.

How do we do this?

With the help of our local volunteers, we identify children that are precluded from school due to poverty and sponsor their education by paying for their tuition fees, their exam registration fees. We also provide them with basic school stationery, text books and a school uniform.  100% of the money you  donate shall be used to send these children to school.

We are unique in that we link each of our sponsors with the child/children they are sponsoring and provide feedback on the children’s progress at school periodically. Our sponsors can therefore enjoy a much closer and satisfying relationship with the children they sponsor than other bigger and similar organisations can provide.  To learn more, visit: www.theguardiannetwork.co.uk

We have started work in Limbe, Cameroon, where we have currently sent two kids to school during the academic year 2009/2010 thanks to sponsors and our fundraising activities ( www.wix.com/guardiannetwork/Guardian-Network-Accessory-Sale ). These two were the lucky ones, but we still have many children on our waiting list, hoping that someone will give them the opportunity to have an education and better their lives. Please sponsor a child today. www.theguardiannetwork.co.uk

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