***/var/www/cif.knighad1.miniserver.com/html/wp-content/themes/cif09_v1/archive.php*** Child's i Foundation
  • We believe children deserve to be in a family.

    Our Social Work Team have been very successful tracing children’s extended families and resettling them. Growing up in their family means they will grow up with a sense of belonging and identity.

    What we’ve discovered is that the extended family members we do manage to trace usually live miles away from Kampala. We’ve created a map which we’ll keep updating so you can see for yourself how far we go to reunite children with their families.

    We always do follow ups to ensure they are safe and thriving in their family and continue to monitor them for a year or until we are confident the child is safe which means on average our social workers and family support team travel over 4000 kms per month which costs us around £645 on fuel a month.

    So far we have resettled and placed 65 children into families which we are so proud about but our new community care pilot will mean even more children will be placed into families and there will come a point when we cannot do it all.

    Last month we resettled a little chap back into his extended family in Kisoro on the border of the Congo, 491 kms away from Malaika Babies Home which would mean a thousand mile round trip to check up on him.

    A little one who we resettled back with his grandma in Kisoro

    We used the UCRNN resource directory and came across a project called Potters Village who like us focus on resettling children into families.

    They have very kindly agreed to regularly check up on his progress and send us social work reports on a monthly basis.

    This is a long shot but we need to find more organisations like Potters Village to create a network to ensure children we place into families are safe. If you know any organisations outside of Kampala who have a great social work team and would like to discuss being part of this network please do get in touch.

    Together we can.

  • Meet Sam Kemp – Finance Management Volunteer

    A very sad goodbye to Sam Kemp on his last day volunteering with us. He has done an amazing job in our Finance and Operations Department over the past couple of months and will be greatly missed!

    How did you hear about Child’s i Foundation?

    I heard about Child’s i Foundation through a company called AfID. AfID helps place Accountants within grass root charities in order to help build their financial capacity. AfID suggested that Child’s i was a really good organisation that was supporting an important cause. Having read a bit more about the charity and after talking to Lucy about the organisations vision, I knew that I wanted to work for Child’s i.

    AfID were really helpful at not only introducing me to to the charity, they also offered a variety of support whilst I was out in Uganda.

    What did you do before working/volunteering for Child’s i Foundation?

    I worked for Nestle for 3 years on their finance graduate scheme. A lot of the business experience that I gained from being at Nestle came in useful whilst working for Child’s i. Although they are completely different organisations, some of the skill sets that are required are similar in certain respects.

    Prior to working at Nestle, I studied geography at Nottingham University and spent a year travelling around Asia and South America.

    Why did you want to work in a developing country?

    I really enjoy experiencing different cultures and places. Having never been to Africa before, going out to work in Uganda was an exciting proposition.

    There was also an aspect of wanting to try and help out a group of people that are vulnerable and have few places to turn for support.

    What was your role for the charity?

    I was the Finance Management but got involved in all types of things from HR, operations, and procurement.

    What were your main achievements?

    The thing that I am most proud of is helping train up the local Ugandan accountant who I was working with. He was really appreciative of the support that I gave him and I think in a year or so he might be in a good position to take on the Finance Manager role himself.

    Briefly describe a typical day in a life in Uganda?

    Impossible, there really is no typical day. You arrive into the office with things all planned out but something new and unexpected would always arrive on your desk that would take things in a completely different direction.

    What were your highlights of your placement?

    Seeing the children leaving Malaika and being resettled with their family has got to be the highlight. It was also great to go and visit the children back in their traditional Ugandan family homes after they had been resettled. It’s really motivational to see that the work that you are doing is really helping change children’s lives.

    It was also really nice to share the whole experience with my girlfriend, Nikki.

    What was the biggest challenge of your time here?

    Staff and volunteers become so passionate about Child’s i Foundation that it becomes really difficult to separate your work and social life. You find yourself working over the weekends and talking about Child’s i related stuff all of the time.

    How is it back being in the UK (talk about your new job)?

    It’s always nice to come home but I really miss Uganda and all the people that I met. Working for Child’s i Foundation really confirmed for me that I wanted to continue working within the international development sector. I have just got a job working for Save the Children who also have a presence in Uganda so I might get back to see everyone a bit sooner than a thought.

    Do you still give us love?

    After working for Child’s i it’s hard to not continue supporting what they do. My girlfriend and I are running the Brighton Marathon in April to try and raise a bit of money. I am also a member of the recently formed Finance Committee that will support the Ugandan staff and Board of Trustees on all financial matters.

    → If you would like to Get Involved and support Child’s i Foundation by giving your time, love or money please visit our new “Get Involved” section of our website for more details.

  • That means I love my mum in the local Luganda language spoken in Uganda.

    As volunteers and staff at Child’s i Foundation, we also love our mums. We know how lucky we are to have them. And that there’s no-one else in the world like them.

    That’s why we’re helping vulnerable mothers with young children become better mums.

    Maureen and her triplets and nurse

    Maureen was referred to our Social Work department at the end of January. She was a mum to triplets weighing only 1kg each. Maureen had nowhere to go and the chances of her daughters’ survival in their village was very slim.

    Our team of trained nurses and carers are helping her be a good mum, teaching her how to look after her precious daughters. After one month in our care all three girls have doubled in size and Maureen’s confidence as a mum grows every day.

    Treat your Mum to a special gift this Mother’s Day (18th March) so we can help more mums like Maureen and more babies can grow up in loving families instead of an orphanage.

    Buy a gift from our online baby shower

    We know that many of you have previously purchased gifts from our baby shower and really appreciate it. We would like to say thank you – we couldn’t do this without you.
  • Trilogy Helping Hand Wash

    We were over the moon to hear that the team at Trilogy – the natural skincare brand based in New Zealand – chose Child’s i Foundation as their charity to celebrate their 10 year anniversary and have designed Trilogy Helping Hand Wash (a gorgeous, limited edition product created specially for Child’s i Foundation).

    They are donating 100% of profits to Child’s i Foundation so please go and buy this beautiful gift online at Trilogy or at Boots (if you are in the UK). It will also be available from major department stores very soon. It’s a great gift and opportunity to convince your work place to restock their hand wash supplies with this special edition!

    Watch the team in Uganda putting it to the test!

  • One of our supporters from the UK asked us a brilliant question about how we find families for our children. This video from our fabulous social work department hopefully goes some way to explaining the process.

  • As 2011 draws to an end we just wanted to say a big thank you for making 2011 such a fantastic year.

    We could not do this without you.

    We are proud to share with you our new mission statement video (thanks to Ian Warren) which shows the problem of baby abandonment in Uganda and how as a worldwide community, we are are finding loving families and giving children a future.

    If you want to get involved, here are ten simple ways to really make a difference.

    1) Watch our new mission statement video and share with your friends and family what we’ve achieved together.

    2) Come and meet us in person at our Meet Up on Thursday 12th January at the Golden Fleece Pub in Bank at 7pm. For more details email martha@childsifoundation.org

    3) So far 93 supporters around the world give to us every month which is our lifeline. We really need more generous people to set up a regular gifts to ensure we can run our babies home. Please set up a regular gift here

    4) Join our Facebook Group and invite your friend to join. Here we share with you all the families you help to make and regular update you on the events at Malaika Babies Home.

    5) Join our mailing list and receive our regular newsletter.

    6) Please think of us next time you are buying a present for a friend or loved one. We can’t think of a better gift than garbage disposal for a week!

    7) Thinking of making a new years resolution to give up smoking or running a marathon to get fit? Why not set up a Just Giving sponsorship page and ask all your friends to donate – that way you will have to do it!

    8) We rely on a worldwide community of volunteers to help run our charity. If you have the time and skills please sign up to get involved.

    9) If you are inspired by Hazel Buck and her Community fundraising team in Sussex and want to set up your very own fundraising committee for Child’s i Foundation please email hazel@childsifoundation.org

    10) If you have a digital camera that you don’t need anymore we really really need one! Please contact lucy@childsifoundation.org

    Thank you and we wish you a very Happy New Year.

  • Since we opened our doors 18 months ago we have placed 53 children into families and proved that with good social work it is possible to place children into families. In fact the average stay at Malaika Babies Home is 4.9 months. This is a real achievement as research shows that any longer than 6 months in residential care can lead to long term psychological damage.

    Our home was full and we needed to find families for children so we launched a mass media campaign to promote local adoption and it was a great success with over 100 Ugandan families contacting us and undergoing assessment.

    Deciding on whether the families are suitable is a huge decision which we did not want to make alone so we established an adoption panel (first of it’s kind in Uganda) chaired by the Ministry of Gender to make the decision collectively.

    Assistant Commissioner (Ministry of Gender & Labour) Mr. James Kaboggoza with the Panel (20 Sept 2011)

    The panel consists of representatives including Caroline Bankusha from the Kampala City Council Probation Service, Gad Mfitundinda Hashaka from the Police Child Protection and Family Unit, Rachael Arinaitwe, a lawyer from ANPPCAN Uganda. Mark Riley from the Ministry and Christina Sempebwa an adoptive parent.

    The forth of our adoption panels took place this week, with  panel members reviewing assessments carried out by our team of Social Workers. So far we have had 17 parents approved by the panel and as a result 15 children from Malaika have been adopted.

    But it doesn’t stop there. As a result of our mass media campaign, our adoption panel and the fact that 54% of all our children are returned back to their families. (Which makes a lot of sense considering that 60% of children in care have families) we have empty beds.

    We’re proving that children do not need to stay in long term residential care and it is possible to find them families so the next challenge we faced was working with the agencies who received the children so they would call on us to take the children into care.

    Currently we have 6 empty beds so we decided to hold an open day for the Police who are the agency who receive most of the at risk, abandoned babies and children in Kampala.

    Yesterday 18 members of the police child protection unit came to visit our home for the first time and we had a brilliant day.

    Lucy having a chat with some of the police at our Open Day at Malaika today

    They were very impressed with our carers and how happy the children were and saw for themselves how we go about finding families for children so fingers crossed that next time they receive a child under 2 years old who needs emergency care and protection we will be getting a call.

  • Having been asked to write a blog about our Community Fundraising Team, it’s hard to know where to start. Probably the best place is at the beginning – just over three years ago when my daughter Lucy came home and announced that she was giving up her TV career and going to set up a home for abandoned babies in Kampala.

    I’d always enjoyed putting on local events to raise funds for sports club etc, so it seemed natural to get a few friends together who I knew were keen supporters of Child’s i Foundation, and form a small committee.

    Community Fundraising Team- Undress for Uganda

    Our first event was ‘Undress for Uganda’ – a clothes-swapping party where everyone brings along good-quality items of clothing to sell, which we soon got other people copying. With a £5 entrance fee (which includes a glass of wine!) and most items on sale at £5, they always prove to be really fun, sociable evenings. At our first, we also had a reflexologist and someone painting nails, also at £5 a pop, and we raised £1,081.

    This spurred us on and our committee grew from four to eight. One of our committee is a keen walker and suggested organising a walk around our local Ashdown Forest for friends, families and dogs on a Sunday morning. We have since made this a regular event (Spring and Autumn) and the band of walkers grows every time. We charge every adult £5 and organise it so that it ends near to a local pub for a pre-Sunday lunch drink.

    We also hold a spring children’s “nearly-new sale” each year. We hire the local village hall and leaflet-drop locally asking for good-as-new babies’ and children’s clothing and toys. The sale itself is growing in popularity as more people get to hear of it, but the advantage is that we are able to send any remaining good clothing, equipment and toys direct to Malaika Babies’ Home. In fact, nothing goes to waste as any clothing left from Undress for Uganda along with the Children’s nearly-new sale, gets take to a car boot sale by two of our committee members where the majority gets sold.

    It’s always a challenge to come up with new ways to raise funds and, in April this year, we held our first Quiz Night. We managed to persuade a colleague, Chris, to take on the job of MC for the evening, found a very reasonable caterer and got our husbands to run the bar and the evening bought in just over £1,000. This will definitely become an annual event.

    We sometimes find that people approach us for help in putting on an event, and we’re always pleased to lend a hand. This year, one of our supporters, Brent suggested holding a cricket match, Rotherfield v Child’s i. He was home from Japan for a month and, in a very short time, put the game together, coercing (in some cases) cricketers who had not played for several years. It was a beautiful summer’s day, tea was provided by all the players and a raffle and quiz rounded off the day. Taking into account the short time it took to organise the event, an amazing £450 was raised by two enthusiastic teams of cricketers keen to do it all again next year.

    Our very own golf ball (CiF Charity Golf Day)

    This brings us to the end of the summer when, two years ago, we held our first Golf Day. With two of the committee being keen golfers, we decided to rally our friends, find a course and put together a golf day. It was quite a feat in the end and we were grateful for all the help we could get! However, undaunted, we have just held another Golf Day and can honestly say it was a great success, bringing in just over£2,500. The players are asking for another next year, but bi-annually is enough for us organisers.

    All the family have got involved. Tea Tunes and Talent is the brainchild of Jo Farrelley, Lucy’s great aunt. A talented pianist and member of Groombridge Amateur Dramatic Society, Jo wanted to raise some money for Child’s i Foundation and realised that a lot of elderly people prefer to go out in the afternoon rather than have to come home after dark. She spread the word and soon had lots of local support and set out a programme of popular music and sketches along with an interval with delicious cakes and a cup of tea. A sing-song at the end rounds off the event and inevitably a few tears are shed by the audience as they sing along to old favourites. She has now organised 2 of these events and we are hoping that there will be many more to come!

    So that just about sums up our year. We have learnt a lot, especially to stick with what we know. Being a local community group, we also have to be careful not to approach the same people all the time, so try to cover different groups and not rely on friends – we want to keep them! However, at the end of the day, the charity sells itself. Its transparency, and the fact that supporters feel they know the children they are helping, makes it so easy to encourage them to donate. Our mantra is to make sure we “Keep the Fun in Fundraising” and think that is what we do.

    Thanks to Sharon, Lyn, Janis, Liz, Julie, Delny, Jeannie, Vicki and Gillian for their tremendous support. They have raised an incredible £7,043.33 so far this year which pays for all the home for a whole month.

    If you would like to put on your own fundraising event in your local community please do drop me a line hazel@childsifoundation.org

  • Last year, we piloted our Mother and Baby Centre to see if we could help prevent abandonment by providing support to vulnerable mothers and their babies. The centre was a success and we learnt a lot, but the main lesson was that the women who came to our centre from the local community benefitted a lot more than the six mothers who lived with us residentially.  So, after much discussion with experts and stakeholders, we have decided to make our prevention service non-residential and support mothers in their homes, enabling us to help even more women in crisis.

    All of our project are pilots. In fact, I was told not to even call it a pilot, but view it more as a ‘proof of concept’ – we want to prove our concept works and with your support, we’re really demonstrating that transitional care is possible in Uganda. We had no idea whether we could resettle children back into families, but we’ve managed to place 43 children into families after an average stay of five months. We were told this would be impossible, but now we are working closely with the government and we want to share our model of care to help other institutions  provide transitional care as an alternative to long-term institutionalisation.

    We’ve learnt that there are many young mothers out there ready to abandon their babies but, given the choice and a little support, we can prevent this happening. So many mothers turn up at our centre that we always have an on-call social worker on hand to give guidance, support and advice. Sometimes, when the family has rejected the mother because of the pregnancy, all it takes is a third party to help them come to terms with the new baby and often all a mother needs is a small amount of money to help with a few months’ rent.

    If the mother is truly destitute, we’ve exhausted all other options and the child is at risk, we admit the child into Malaika but encourage the mother to spend as much time with her baby as she can, learning how to be a good parent. At the same time, our social work team work with them to help change their circumstances so they can afford to keep their baby.

    Reunited with Mum

    Reunited with Mum

    But this is not the end of our intervention. When the child goes back home to their family, we work with them for up to a year to ensure the child is safe. We have some incredible Family Support Workers, who visit families frequently and teach them good parenting. Here is a film made by our new volunteer Tom Hollings about the work our Family Support Worker does with one of her families:

    As usual, we couldn’t do this without you. Thank you to everyone who has made Child’s i Foundation what it is today, and thank you for continually supporting our work and being part of a community who believe the best place for a child is in a family.

  • Promoting Adoption in Uganda … with the help of our worldwide community.

    Adoption here in Uganda is relatively uncommon and, sadly, there is a real stigma attached to it. A brilliant journalist, Angela Kintu, wrote a very brave article in the Sunday Vision about her personal experiences of adoption and backlash she endured when she chose to adopt her baby. It received so much attention she wrote another article about how adoption changed her life.

    Once children arrive at our centre, we do everything we can to trace their families but, when we are unsuccessful, our aim is to place them in new families as soon as possible. The purpose of our pilot media campaign was to see if we could change the mindsets of Ugandans to encourage them to adopt instead of  hundreds of children languishing in orphanages across Uganda. We knew we were not going to change minds over night, but we wanted to create a debate. This is how we did it…

    In the spirit of Child’s i Foundation, we created a media campaign using the time, love and money of our worldwide community of volunteers. This campaign would not have been possible without Martha Parsons, an ITN Journalist from the UK, who volunteered five months of her time and expertise to produce the campaign.

    Wonderwoman Martha

    Wonderwoman Martha

    First of all, we needed a website – step forward Anu Gupta, a brilliant web developer from the UK who gave up his Easter to build (thanks to Wordpress) our Ugandan’s Adopt website for free.

    We filled our website with powerful videos to encourage adoption, produced by media volunteers from around the world who come and give their TV expertise for free. Thanks to Ian Warren, Kirsty Mitchell, Katie Cochrane, Josie Gallo, Barbara Graham, Liam Stewart, Keren Riley and Manu Lorenzone. This powerful video was filmed by Keren Riley and produced by Manu Lorenzone and Martha Parsons.


    We wanted to give Ugandan parents adoption packs to take home full of information about the process and an expression of interest form. For those, we thank designer Becci Buckley, who designed them.

    Adoption brochure

    Adoption brochure

    Our Billboard campaign can only be described as a truly collaborative effort. We had 24 hours to come up with a campaign idea, so we posted a plea on our Facebook group to find an advertising creative. Creative Gordon Roberts stepped forward and worked on a brilliant campaign idea “Love is All They Need…Adopt A Child’  while Jessica Rodriguez and Stijn Aelbers offered their time to take pictures of our children.

    One of our billboards in Kampala

    One of our billboards in Kampala

    George and Desire (Joey’s Parents) offered to front our campaign and we paid for a designer to design the billboard. Alliance Media very kindly gave us the Billboards for free and we had to pay for printing and flighting, which came to £831 and designer Martha Anyango Oringo very generously gave us a 50% discount.


    Next we wanted to hit the airwaves and who better to ask than the incredible Dave Wartnaby (remember the guy who came out to Uganda and set up a studio on his bed?) Dave is the voice of Capital FM in Uganda and, over the past 18 months, has not charged them a penny for his lovely voice – instead he asked them to give us the airtime instead.  He also persuaded Jo McCrostie at This Is Global agency to write our script, while Dave produced our radio adverts. Thanks also to Jackie Lumbasi, who is constantly on Capital FM promoting our adoption campaign and the guys at Radio Simba, who gave us a very reasonable price to promote our campaign.

    Our adverts promoting adoption on Uganda’s leading TV station NTV have been very successful, and we’ve received many calls from prospective adoptive parents. Here are both our adverts produced by Manu Lorenzone and Martha Parsons.

    Our hour-long NTV debate show with Mr James Kaboggoza, Desire our adoptive parents and our social worker Barbra was hugely informative and the phone lines were jammed with callers wanting to know more. We are very grateful for Henry Kyomu for filming and Ben Ssebuufu  for presenting on the vidoes.


    We could not have done this campaign without the backing of the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development, ANPPCAN, CRANE, Families For Children and Carol Bankusha, who have helped us develop this pilot over the past year.

    I think we can confidently say it has been incredibly successful. Every one of you who has given your love, time and money should be very proud of what you’ve achieved. We already have 60 families being assessed, but this is just the beginning.  The mindset towards adoption is not going to change overnight, but the 60 families who have already volunteered may well encourage even more families to step forward so we can find homes for more children in desperate need of love and stability.

    Next stop is presentations, so if you would like our team to visit your business or church and do a presentation, please do get in touch email adoption@childsifoundation.org

    or call 0791777319

    Many thanks – we couldn’t do this without you

Blogs for this section

  • The only way forward is working together

    Posted by Lucy Buck on April 14th, 2012
    pic

    We believe children deserve to be in a family. Our Social Work Team have been very successful tracing children’s extended families and resettling them. Growing up in their family means they will grow up with a sense of belonging and identity. What we’ve discovered is that the extended family members we do manage to trace usually live [...] Read More →

  • Get Involved

    Posted by Kirsty on March 16th, 2012
    pic

    Meet Sam Kemp – Finance Management Volunteer How did you hear about Child’s i Foundation? I heard about Child’s i Foundation through a company called AfID. AfID helps place Accountants within grass root charities in order to help build their financial capacity. AfID suggested that Child’s i was a really good organisation that was supporting an important [...] Read More →

  • Maama wange mwagala!

    Posted by admin on March 8th, 2012
    pic

    That means ♥ I love my mum♥ in the local Luganda language spoken in Uganda. As volunteers and staff at Child’s i Foundation, we also love our mums. We know how lucky we are to have them. And that there’s no-one else in the world like them. That’s why we’re helping vulnerable mothers with young children [...] Read More →

  • Helping hands

    Posted by admin on February 10th, 2012
    pic

    We were over the moon to hear that the team at Trilogy – the natural skincare brand based in New Zealand – chose Child’s i Foundation as their charity to celebrate their 10 year anniversary and have designed Trilogy Helping Hand Wash (a gorgeous, limited edition product created specially for Child’s i Foundation). They are donating [...] Read More →

  • Finding families

    Posted by Lucy Buck on January 30th, 2012
    pic

    One of our supporters from the UK asked us a brilliant question about how we find families for our children. This video from our fabulous social work department hopefully goes some way to explaining the process. Read More →

  • By a community, for a community

    Posted by Lucy Buck on December 28th, 2011

    As 2011 draws to an end we just wanted to say a big thank you for making 2011 such a fantastic year. We could not do this without you. We are proud to share with you our new mission statement video (thanks to Ian Warren) which shows the problem of baby abandonment in Uganda and how as [...] Read More →

  • Empty beds

    Posted by Lucy Buck on December 2nd, 2011
    pic

    Since we opened our doors 18 months ago we have placed 53 children into families and proved that with good social work it is possible to place children into families. In fact the average stay at Malaika Babies Home is 4.9 months. This is a real achievement as research shows that any longer than 6 [...] Read More →

  • Hazel Buck’s fundraising mantra

    Posted by volunteer on November 28th, 2011
    pic

    Having been asked to write a blog about our Community Fundraising Team, it’s hard to know where to start. Probably the best place is at the beginning – just over three years ago when my daughter Lucy came home and announced that she was giving up her TV career and going to set up a [...] Read More →

  • pic

    Last year, we piloted our Mother and Baby Centre to see if we could help prevent abandonment by providing support to vulnerable mothers and their babies. The centre was a success and we learnt a lot, but the main lesson was that the women who came to our centre from the local community benefitted a [...] Read More →

  • Promoting adoption

    Posted by Lucy Buck on August 16th, 2011
    pic

    Promoting Adoption in Uganda … with the help of our worldwide community. Adoption here in Uganda is relatively uncommon and, sadly, there is a real stigma attached to it. A brilliant journalist, Angela Kintu, wrote a very brave article in the Sunday Vision about her personal experiences of adoption and backlash she endured when she chose [...] Read More →