Marsha Winsryg will be talking about the AACDP, from its inception to now.
She'll be sharing stories about:
The Mama Bakhita Cheshire Home
Making Art
The Zambezi Doll Company
Zambezi Communal Farm
Hope to see you there!
Marsha Winsryg will be talking about the AACDP, from its inception to now.
She'll be sharing stories about:
The Mama Bakhita Cheshire Home
Making Art
The Zambezi Doll Company
Zambezi Communal Farm
Hope to see you there!
Talks at Two Libraries
20 Years in Zambia
Saturday, April 22, 2PM West Tisbury Library
Saturday, May 6, 2PM Oak Bluffs Library
Stories about:
The Mama Bakhita Cheshire Home
Making Art
The Zambezi Doll Company
Zambezi Communal Farm
In 2021, during the pandemic, we scratched our heads and then rolled up our shirtsleeves and began our most ambitious project to date: a community farm for the families that we have known since 2008.
How did we get there? A serpentine path through 20 years.
The uncultivated land in 2021
The maize has dried on the stalks, and is now being harvested to store for grinding into mealie meal for making nshima. The farmer harvesting in the picture above is Ivy, one of the original members of the AACDP group of mothers of children with disabilities who have gone to the Mama Bakhita Cheshire Home for physiotherapy and/or school.
The mother of five girls, Ivy was one of the first Zambezi Doll makers and volunteers to work on Zambezi Farm. Always cheerful and hard-working, she often cooks lunch for the group when they are working in the fields.
Now is a great time to help Ivy and the other farmers get the storage shed for the dry maize completed. There are 2 days left in the GlobalGiving Little by Little campaign - donations up to $50 are matched at 50%, so your gift has even greater impact. CLICK HERE to donate by Friday!