Friday’s Child: A Chance to Support an Impoverished Child in Kenya

Brian Musila (Child No. 127)

Brian lives with his mother, Mwelu, who does various odd jobs when they are available.  His father is no longer living and he has no siblings.

His favorite color is red and he likes to play football (American Soccer). 

The class he likes most is English because he wants to become a pilot and the class he likes least is math…he doesn’t know why, he just doesn’t like it. 

Brian’s duties at home is washing the utensils and he enjoys helping his mother with what she needs to do.

Brian is among several children who are ready for sponsorship.  To choose a child to sponsor, please visit our Sponsorship Gallery.

Friday’s Child: A Chance to Support an Impoverished Child in Kenya

Kevin Ndumgu (Child No. MC108)

Kevin is an orphan and was living with his grandmother.  She brought him to Mercy Child Foundation in Koma, Kenya. 

He was born December 1, 1997 in Githigiu, Kenya.  He has two brothers and four sisters. 

Kevin’s favorite color is blue and he enjoys playing football (American Soccer).

His favorite subject is English because it’s not hard.  His least favorite subject is Math because it’s hard. 

He would like to be an engineer for vehicles when he grows up. 

Kevin’s chores include fetching water, sweeping and mopping.   

When his chores are finished he likes studying.

Kevin is among several children who are ready for sponsorship.  To choose a child to sponsor, please visit our Sponsorship Gallery.

Friday’s Child: A Chance to Support an Impoverished Child in Kenya

Mbinya Kitele (Child No. 125)

Mbinya lives with her mother Mary who is unemployed.  Her father lives in Nairobi and visits sometimes. 

She has one brother. 

Mbinya’s favorite color is red and she likes to play hide and seek. 

Her favorite class is Kiswahili because it is not hard for her.  Her least liked class is science because it is hard for her. 

Mbinya’s duties at home include fetching fire wood and washing utensils.  She enjoys doing her homework in the evening.

Mbinya is among several children who are ready for sponsorship.  To choose a child to sponsor, please visit our Sponsorship Gallery.

Friday’s Child: A Chance to Support an Impoverished Child in Kenya

Kevin Mwenda (Child No. MC126)

Kevin is an orphan.  When his father died, Kevin’s step-mom said the church could take him to live at Mercy Child Foundation in Koma, Kenya. 

He was born September 10, 1994 in Meru, Kenya and has three brothers, Frank, lives here with him and one sister who is not here. 

Kevin’s favorite color is white and he enjoys playing football (American soccer). 

His favorite subject is Science because he says “it’s the best and I get it.”  He would like to be an Engineer in masonry when he gets older.   

His least favorite subject is English because he says he doesn’t understand it. 

Kevin’s chores include fetching water, mopping and digging in the shamba (garden).  

When his chores are finished he likes playing football.

Kevin is among several children who are ready for sponsorship.  To choose a child to sponsor, please visit our Sponsorship Gallery.

Work, play, visit…what do I do?

What do visitors do while they are here with us?  They go about daily living with us…no electricity-use flashlights, no vehicle-walk to the Academy, rice and skuma for lunch-rice and skuma for lunch.  No 5-star hotel experiences – you make your own bed, you help yourself to the pantry/frig/oven and generally make yourself at home.  We visit neighbors, we play games with the students, we chat the way forward with people.

We were asked recently by a friend, don’t the visitors get bored?  Well maybe, but this is our life here in Tala, Kenya, boring moments and all.  We don’t go on safari but we do see goats running in the pot-holed streets, we don’t head into Nairobi to visit the museums but we do go to the Nakumatt to pick up supplies, we do however live moment by moment by God’s grace and mercy and you never know what will happen! 

Robert (our very first visitor way back in 2008) talked with the kids, answered all their questions and encouraged them in their relationship with God.  Theresa and Kelli spent time with the kids, made crafts and encouraged them in their studies.  Bobbie taught the kids songs, cheered them on and played football (soccer) with the younger students.  Charlotte unfortunately didn’t get to spend any time with the students as they were on break during her brief visit.  Now Nick is here and I believe I’ll put him to work!  Our storage area needs organizing…what the heck is in there? 

These are the suitcases Nick is emptying and organizing.

Oooo, hoodies! 

Wonder what else he is finding!?

But don’t worry, I’m not working him too hard…

Unfortunately I couldn’t take a photo from the front because the kids would have posed…before I got my camera Nick was surrounded by the girls looking at him star-struck!  By the time I took this the boys had joined the group.

Nick and Thomas play a bit of football.  Notice Thomas has one shoe on?  His friend Kelvin let him borrow one shoe so they could both play football!

If you’d like to experience daily life in Tala, Kenya please contact us (email is the best way to get in touch with us) and karibuni!

Friday’s Child: A Chance to Support an Impoverished Child in Kenya

Bonfase Ngui (Child No. 123)

Bonfase lives at Nice View Academy in Tala, Kenya with his mother, Jane, who is the Pre-Unit (kindergarten) teacher at the Academy.  His parents are divorced. 

He was born in Mwiingi, Kenya on 4-6-2001 and has two brothers and one sister.  One brother and his sister attend Nice View. 

Bonfase’s favorite color is yellow and he enjoys playing football (American soccer). 

His favorite class is Christian Religious Education (CRE) because he wants to “know more about Jesus.”  His least favorite class is math because it’s hard. 

His duties at the Academy include washing utensils.  He enjoys doing his homework after his chores.

Bonfase is among several children who are ready for sponsorship.  To choose a child to sponsor, please visit our Sponsorship Gallery.

Bread alone?

How do you tell a child God loves them yet do not fill their stomach?  I know, I know “…man does not live on bread alone…”  (Deuteronomy 8:3 NIV, emphasis added).  But as I was thinking and meditating on that question and verse the word alone jumped out at me.  To me there is a lesson to be learned here…we need bread (food) to live, surprised!?

You may already know that from basic science of the human body… food = energy.  If I need food then how can I overlook those who aren’t getting food?  For me it was very easy in the States where any type of food is available 24/7.  It was easy to be obsessed with food – what will I eat, how much will I eat, how little will I eat, am I eating too much, am I eating too little, where will I eat, when will I eat, when will I eat again…I think you get the idea.  It was easy to think everyone, everywhere had enough food.   

Tala is just one small speck in this world, but it’s the speck on the globe where God has called Chuck and I to live.  Living here I’m finding it easier to see those who do not have even their basic needs being met.  Are there more people here than in the States who are going hungry, absolutely.  But even being surrounded by needs I find I can close my eyes to it…that selfish, wicked heart rears its ugly head.  God always finds a way though to open my eyes to the need He wants me to see and whether I am able to help or not I say a prayer to our Heavenly Father because I know:

  • the LORD will hear when I call to him“, He will “be merciful to me and hear my prayer“, “You hear, O LORD, the desire of the afflicted; you encourage them, and you listen to their cry” – Psalm

As it says in Brandon Heath’s song:

Give me your eyes for just one second
Give me your eyes so I can see
Everything that I keep missing
Give me your love for humanity
Give me your arms for the broken hearted
The ones that are far beyond my reach
Give me your heart for the once forgotten
Give me your eyes so I can see

I believe we can all open our eyes, no matter where we live, and allow God to show us what He wants each of us to see and how He wants each of us to respond.

Friday’s Child: A Chance to Support an Impoverished Child in Kenya

Jacinta Kanana (Child No. MC115)

Jacinta’s mother and father have both died.  She was living with her older sister, who gave permission for Jacinta to live at Mercy Child Foundation in Koma, Kenya. 

She was born August 26, 1994 in Meru, Kenya and has one brother and one sister who live elsewhere. 

Jacinta’s favorite color is maroon and she likes playing netball (basketball). 

Her favorite class is Math because she understands it and her least favorite subject is Social Studies because it’s hard. 

Her chores at the orphanage include fetching water, washing utensils, washing clothes and mopping.  When her chores are finished she likes studying. 

Jacinta is among several children who are ready for sponsorship.  To choose a child to sponsor, please visit our Sponsorship Gallery.

Scores & prayers

We’ve received several of our secondary school (high school) students scores and we got mixed results.  These are the students who are sponsored by Nice View Academy therefore we are paying their school fees and materials. 

Most of the boys have done pretty well the second term – bringing in B’s while one student went from a B to a D (but we heard he had been sick most of the term).  The girls however have not done as well.  Most went from B’s to D’s and E’s.  The reasons we heard were varied and some quite legitimate – one girl said she couldn’t see the board (we are sending her to an eye doctor), one said the work in the first term was mainly repetition of 8th grade and second term was new material so much harder. 

Whatever the reason we had a talk with a few of the students to find out what happened and to encourage them to work hard.  We emphasized that we could only do so much to help them with their education (getting books, glasses, etc.) but they would have to ultimately do the work to succeed.

Some girls do not feel education is important…they see their mothers (if they have one), aunts, grandmothers etc. who got married very early, had kids and that was their life.  Now they see the same future for themselves so why bother with education.  I’m praying and I ask for your prayers also that this is not the case with these girls.  May they see the love of Christ in the opportunity of having an education, may they work hard at their studies and bring their grades up, may they resist temptation from others to forgo their studies to have fun.  We explained to them the importance of a balanced life – yes study, yes have fun, yes socialize…all these things must be in balance with their main focus being their relationship with Christ.  He is the one who will give them the strength to continue on.

In Nice View we also received Zone scores (zones are smaller than districts so approximately 34 schools in our zone).  The students weren’t lower than position 4 in any of the Classes and Class 5 (5th grade) was in position 1!  What a great achievement and I’m so proud of them…now for prayers they will continue working hard and keep up the scores as they end the school year in November and move forward in their classes in January.

Please also pray for our wisdom in this area…when do you tell a student “your grades aren’t holding up so we can’t pay for your school fees anymore” or how do you tell if a student isn’t putting in the effort?  We’ve told many of them that sponsors from the US do not want to see failing grades and we expect better from them, but what if it’s just not in that student?  Where do you draw the line?  Not an easy place to be because I would love for all the students to WANT to do good, to WANT to succeed, to WANT nothing more than to please the Lord in their work but not everyone will feel that way so when do we say enough is enough?

Friday’s Child: A Chance to Support an Impoverished Child in Kenya

Anthony Kioko (Child No. 122)

Anthony is an orphan (mother and father have died) and attends Nice View Academy in Tala, Kenya. 

He lives with his grandmother, Kavindu. 

Anthony was born in Kyakatulu, Kenya sometime in 2000 and has two brothers. 

His favorite color is white and he loves to play football (American soccer). 

Anthony likes English class the most because he likes to speak in English.  The class he likes the least is “none”. 

His duties at home include washing utensils and sweeping the house.  He enjoys doing homework at night.

Anthony is among several children who are ready for sponsorship.  To choose a child to sponsor, please visit our Sponsorship Gallery.