WHO WE ARE & WHAT WE DO
WHY WAS THE KENYA KESHO TRUST CHARITY STARTED
Tomorrow is tough for lots of kids. Tomorrow for kids from poor families in Kenya can be very tough indeed.
Kenya Kesho, translated into English means Kenya for Tomorrow or Kenya for the Future. Kenya Kesho Trust helps make tomorrow a far more optimistic and cheerful world for girls from very poor families.
The Kenya Kesho School for Girls will create a whole new dimension to education, development and success for girls in our area, for our Trustees, for our students, both those enrolled presently and for those to be enrolled in the future and for Peter and myself.
The charity was started to help our community break the cycle of poverty. After a few years financing teachers, paying for books, school fees, university fees etc we felt we were not making a big enough impact locally so we decided to build The Kenya Kesho School for Girls. A primary school that is an icon within the community. With a primary school education a girl is more able to learn to fill her place in the community, will offer her children a more rounded education and will be more inclined to be a leader within the community and the larger arena. The Kenya Kesho Trust fully finances and manages The Kenya Kesho School for Girls. We will be operating from a very small area – 5km radius from the school in Mshiu Village – but the impact will be huge.
TOGETHER WE WILL
We bring our energy, our enthusiasm and our creativity to our project.
Why don’t you bring your energy, your enthusiasm, your creativity, your skills and your confidence to The Kenya Kesho School for Girls?
Join us. Support us. Come and see us.
Build the future with us.
KENYA IS MY HEARTBEAT!
Peter, my husband, and I are both Kenyans of Dutch and British descent and have spent the last 30 years living and working in Shimoni. For the past twelve years we have been supporting education in the district. Now that we are semi-retired we feel the need to become more involved.
The Kenya Kesho Trust was started with an inheritance we, Peter and Sandra Ruysenaars, received from our parents, Willem and Jopie Ruysenaars and Monty and Margaret England, when they died. We decided then that we would invest our inheritance into education in this locality. Education, as you all know, is the only way forward for development and progress in any community.
In 2006 we started working with local communities and schools in the location to improve education standards by sponsoring teachers’ assistants in local primary schools. This incentive proved not to be very productive or successful. The decision was made to abandon the idea.
“Now, what shall we do?” was the next question . . . . . . . .
We decided to build The Kenya Kesho School for Girls . . . . . . . .