Gem is almost home!

Dear Friends, I’m writing to bring you up-to-date with my young friend Geminy Maw who is still pedalling hard on her return journey from Berlin. Gem has had a real adventure, some good times some not so good but knowing Gem she is still smiling! Her emblem Spreading Smiles Across the Miles suits her so well!
Just to remind you – Gem only returned from New Zealand in February this year when she announced: ‘My next mission and how I am Spreading Smiles Across The Miles….. a solo cycling trip to Berlin and Back to build Joy Clinic, first point medical centre and midwifery unit at St James!’ Through her infectious enthusiasm and love for Uganda Gem had already gained the money for a borehole at St James which was installed in September 2014 providing safe drinking water for many people!
I’m sure some of you have been checking her blog at http://www.ssatm.wordpress.com but if not I will give you a very brief taster!
Norman and I said goodbye to Gem at Stockport Station on May 6th with a bike heavily laden with amongst other things a tent, clothes, repair kit and tools including a spare tyre, and of course lots of stickers, sponsor forms and a flag she had designed herself attached to the back of her bike! She had spent many weeks training and gathering together everything she needed for her challenge.

Gem caught a ferry over to the Netherlands where she found it very bike friendly with easy to follow cycle paths and flat with many fellow cyclists to keep her company so she made lots of friends. She headed north to Oldenburg in Germany to avoid the main roads. With her flag flying from her bike people often stopped her, asking about the trip. A German teacher Gem had met on the ferry invited her to go to stay in her home. When she reached the town Gem couldn’t find the address but was rescued by the local opera singer who showed her right to the door. She said everyone was so friendly. This lady took her to spend a day at the local high school where she shared with the children all about her travels around the world, her present challenge & of course Uganda. They asked her many questions and then pretending to be newspaper reporters wrote articles about her!

Each night Gem had to find somewhere to sleep and mostly these were beautiful places in the countryside where she would pitch her tent. They call this freedom camping. She describes in her blog how she saw lots of different creatures but also how she was attacked by mosquitoes so had to get into her tent fast once she had pitched it!
One night she woke up to hear loud running in the undergrowth and felt very scared.
Then there was a loud roar followed by many other roars. Gem stayed quiet hoping whatever it was would go away. Then she plucked up courage to peep out of her tent to find an enormous stag deer looking for its mate! Often as she rode along animals such as foxes, stoats and rabbits shared her cycle path. She never felt lonely!
She arrived in Bremen after a very long ride and was looking forward to staying in a hostel away from the mosquitoes for a change but then disaster struck, she got her front wheel stuck in a tram track, wobbled and the heavily loaded bike went down hard on her left arm. Fortunately an x ray showed there were no broken bones but Gem was unable to ride her bike for three weeks. She made the most of these unfortunate circumstances having met some more lovely people when she had had her accident. She was interviewed for a newspaper, got involved in making a film, worked in a refugee camp with refugees from Syria and other war torn countries.
Eventually Gem arrived in Berlin where she hit a heatwave. She took time off cycling to visit all the famous sites including the Holocaust Memorial which she found very moving.
A new friend painted a giant picture of her Spreading Smiles Across the Miles emblem on part of the Berlin Wall! She got involved in many other activities and seems to have found every music group, get-together, festival big and small. One was called the Welcome Festival where she really did feel welcome and enjoyed the music and dance and the unusual lifestyles of many of the people she met. Gem was in her element!
Gem is now on her way home and is back in the netherlands and heading to Delft where she will spend a few days with relatives before her last leg home. She hopes to be back in Macclesfield by the 1st of August and I will be there to meet her along with the local newspapers I hope!
I suggested to Vernon Primary School that they might like to do their own Bicathon in support of Gem and on Monday 13th July they raised just over £50. It was the late Mrs Dee Cooper at Vernon School that first supported Gem’s grandmother Maria Maw’s work in Uganda in 2002 when I had my first visit there. Then in 2008 the present head teacher Mrs Carvell, took on the challenge to build St James! So the school’s support for Gem, Maria’s granddaughter, is very appropriate! The day of the bikeathon was also the 65th birthday of James Mutyaba, head teacher of St James Junior School!
Thanks to all of you who have already sponsored Gem but she has a long way to go before she can reach her target so please, if you can possibly donate some money it would show Gem just how much her endeavours mean to everyone. Joy Clinic now has a roof on the two small wards and all the money Gem raises will go towards more building work. With your help, brick by brick we will complete the building of Joy Clinic! Get in touch if you would like to know how to donate…..please!
Another of Gem’s favourite sayings:
SMILES ARE INFECTIOUS SO LETS INFECT THE WORLD!

St Paul’s Catholic Primary School Poynton comes to the rescue of St James!

Dear Friends of St James
It was my first visit to the St Paul’s Summer Fair last Saturday and I looked forward to it very much as it was also my first opportunity of meeting the parents and other friends of the school who support my work in Uganda. I also went with the hope in my heart that I would make some money to go towards solving a problem that had arisen recently at St James.

The day was so enjoyable and a fantastic success considering it is a very small school. The letter below is the one I sent to St Paul’s and explains how they ‘came to the rescue’!

The attached photo shows a banner made by the children in Uganda in 2005. The colours of their hands have faded but the message is still very relevant – Make Poverty History – Together we are endeavouring to do this in Nakakabala by providing an education for the children. I truly believe that education IS the route out of poverty and I have had the privilege to see this happening! So, a big THANK YOU to you all for your part in this and please keep up the good work of supporting St James! x

Also attached are photos of my Uganda stall and some of my customers! I still have lots available so if you are interested please get in touch with me then you can either come round to my house for a closer look or I can send you more detailed photos of the items. In fact I have had my first ‘online’ sale this week – thank you Emma!
X

JAMBO & ASANTE SANA to Mrs Armstong-Boyle and all the children, staff and parents at St Paul’s for making me so welcome at your Summer Fair. I enjoyed meeting you all as did my husband and friends Anne and Sophie. Your generosity raised just over £300 for St James Junior School and this contribution has come at an advantageous and crucial time for the school.

During recent flash floods the water swept through the Nursery and Year 1 classrooms and caused quite a lot of damage. So to prevent this happening again we need to divert the water as it comes down the hill and install culverts to enable access from the lane that runs alongside St James. The cost of this has been assessed at 1,150,000 Ugandan Shillings (£290) so with the cost of the money transfer to James, St Paul’s will enable this work to be carried out. I really cannot thank you all enough!
I look forward to coming in to see you all next term to bring you up-to-date with all that has been going on at St James and to tell you about my next visit to Uganda in December!

Love and hugs from

Gerry, Mr James and all the children you are helping in Uganda

June – Latest News from St James Junior School in Uganda

Dear Friends
The children at St James have returned for the second term of the school year and James tells me all is going well. He has just registered the older children for their National Leavers exams which they will sit in November, all hoping to qualify for secondary school. This year there are 30 candidates which is great news but brings with it a challenge of how to pay for their registration to the government. Only 13 of the candidates pay the 27,000 fee, the other 17 make small contributions in food etc. Finding the money is always a challenge for James and I often wonder how he manages it! One thing he won’t have to pay for is ‘sitting’ fee or transport as St James is now a Registered Exam Centre so hopefully several other schools will pay to use our facilities!

Children wait in line to get the school emblem put on their new uniforms

St James new uniform, sunshine yellow!

St James has a new uniform! James was getting comments from some of the parents that their children ‘disappeared’ in the chocolate brown uniform which I do agree with as often in my photos they were almost one colour! James and the PTA have chosen sunshine yellow to replace the dark brown. The girls wear a yellow dress with a khaki collar and the boys a yellow shirt with khaki collar and shorts. The dress and shirt have the school emblem printed on them. I must admit they look very good and very sunny! I have made this photo into birthday cards to sell for St James! St James School Emblem

New desks in the new classrooms! The children love the new desks in their new classrooms that many of you helped to provide! For just £20 you can sponsor a desk too and have your name or
the name of a friend or loved one painted on it just like the one in the photo!Michael

Ceiling, solar and paint for Hambridge Hall!

The school authorities have told James that we need to put the ceiling in the four classrooms plus paint it before the children sit their exams in November. This is a bit of a challenge as the
ceiling alone will cost over 6million UGX (approx. £1500) which doesn’t sound a lot but it is in
Uganda and is a lot for us to raise! We will plod on, brick by brick & hopefully succeed!

Very noisy without a ceiling!

Progress on Joy Clinic. Below is the latest photo of Joy Clinic. The walls of the treatment and delivery rooms are up and recently the roof went on. I learnt recently that Joys father was a doctor and when he saw her struggling to help the Nakakabala community, delivering babies in the tiny home where she and James lived with their six children, his greatest wish was for a clinic to be built. Lets hope he is looking down and seeing what is happening now! The photo is of Joy as a midwife. Everyone misses her so much!

The outer shell of the two small consulting rooms are complete.

Joy training to be a midwife (2)We are still a long way from completing Joy Clinic with lots of fund raising still to do but once again we are receiving help …………Geminy Maw, a 26 year old from Macclesfield, who found us funds for the borehole last year, has taken on a challenge to cycle solo to  ‘Berlin and Back on a Bike’ to raise awareness and money for Joy Clinic. Her motto is ‘Spreading Smiles Across the Miles’ and with her smile she certainly does that!

June newsletter part 1- new uniform, desks etc

The children at St James have returned for the second term of the school year and James tells me all is going well. He has just registered the older children for their National Leavers exams which they will sit in November, all hoping to qualify for secondary school. This year there are 30 candidates which is great news but brings with it a challenge of how to pay for their registration to the government. Only 13 of the candidates pay the 27,000 fee, the other 17 make small contributions in food etc. Finding the money is always a challenge for James and I often wonder how he manages it! One thing he won’t have to pay for is ‘sitting’ fee or transport as St James is now a Registered Exam Centre so hopefully several other schools will pay to use our facilities!

St James has a new uniform! James was getting comments from some of the parents that their children ‘disappeared’ in the chocolate brown uniform which I do agree with as often in my photos they were almost one colour! James and the PTA have chosen sunshine yellow to replace the dark brown. The girls wear a yellow dress with a khaki collar and the boys a yellow shirt with khaki collar and shorts. The dress and shirt have the school emblem printed on them. I must admit they look very good and very sunny! I have made this photo into birthday cards to sell for St James!

New desks in the new classrooms! The children love the new desks in their new classrooms that many of you helped to provide! For just £20 you can sponsor a desk too and have your name or the name of a friend or loved one painted on it just like the one in the photo!

Ceiling, solar and paint for Hambridge Hall! The school authorities have told James that we need to put the ceiling in the four classrooms plus paint it before the children sit their exams in November. This is a bit of a challenge as the ceiling alone will cost over 6million UGX (approx £1500) which doesn’t sound a lot but it is in Uganda and is a lot for us to raise! We will plod on, brick by brick & hopefully succeed!

St James June Newsletter part 2 – Joy Clinic, Amazing Gem, Gem’s accident!

Progress on Joy Clinic. Below is the latest photo of Joy Clinic. The walls of the treatment and delivery rooms are up and recently the roof went on. I learnt recently that Joys father was a doctor and when he saw her struggling to help the Nakakabala community, delivering babies in the tiny home where she and James lived with their six children, his greatest wish was for a clinic to be built. Lets hope he is looking down and seeing what is happening now! The photo is of Joy as a midwife. Everyone misses her so much!
We are still a long way from completing Joy Clinic with lots of fund raising still to do but once again we are receiving help …………Geminy Maw, a 26 year old from Macclesfield, who found us funds for the borehole last year, has taken on a challenge to cycle solo to ‘Berlin and Back on a Bike’ to raise awareness and money for Joy Clinic. Her motto is ‘Spreading Smiles Across the Miles’

and with her smile she certainly does that!

She has had an amazing time meeting amazing people. This saying ‘There are no strangers, only friends we have not met before’ comes to mind! Gem even ended up living with a family whose mum is a teacher and Gem spent a day in her school talking to the children about her life, her trip and Uganda! DO READ HER BLOG! httpsssatm.wordpress.com/om/ There is so much more to read about her trip and Gem herself!

Unfortunately, last week Gem had an accident. Everything was going very well and she had got as far as Bremen in north western Germany but then as she was crossing the city her front wheel got stuck in a tramline and with the heavily laden bike she came off falling hard on her left arm and was in a great deal of pain. She was soon surrounded by caring people and ended up staying with two of them. She had X-rays at the hospital and the good news is that nothing is broken ‘just’ badly bruised. She has been given pain killers and told to rest up for two weeks. She was so upset and disapointed, worrying about how things would turn out and that she wouldn’t raise the money she wanted to do for Joy Clinic. Typical Gem, she doesn’t want to let anyone down! She very sensibly is following doctors orders and after spending a few days resting has ‘got a ride’ to Hamburg to visit friends who weren’t on her route which is a bonus. Hamburg is famous for its street art and graffiti and someone did this special painting for Gem! Amazing!

I had another communication from Gem recently to say she is still in quite a lot of pain so has made the sensible decision to take more rest BUT knowing Gem as I do the saying ‘a change is as good as a rest’ comes to mind. This is what she wrote in her message today:

‘due to this accident tho i have connected with the people behind the bicycle movement in bremen hu have been great, they want to do a story on me, connect me with other people in hamburg or berlin and maybe cycle with me for a while when i leave bremen. i have also been asked to b the star in my own short movie as part of a 48hour movie making festival in hamburg so i am going to try and take my bike and mostly empty (as i cant manage the weight) panniers back to hamburg for the weekend and fingers crossed we get accepted and find a team to pull it together.
i am about to go to the city bike center where u can go and learn to fix ur bike for free and ask them to have a look over and make sure its all ok before I use it!
i also took part in a critical mass last friday in hamburg, where cyclist ride in a group and take over the road. i was one of about 4,000 and had a great time tho i couldnt do it on my bike and i was rather sore but still at the end it was well worth it!’

You can follow Gem’s Blog at httpsssatm.wordpress.com/om/ and please show your appreciation of her efforts by sponsoring her if you possibly can. Thank you!