SOS Children's Village Kisumu

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Beneficiaries

SOS relies on the kindness and generosity of Canadians to be able to provide a home for the most vulnerable children of Africa.

 

By becoming a child sponsor you are helping an individual child in need.

(You will receive a Canadian charitable tax receipt)

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SOS Children's Villages in Kisuma

 

SOS Children’s Villages began its work in Kisumu in 2010. Our social centre here provides a family strengthening programme to the local community, which aims to alleviate hardship so that family stability can be upheld and children will not be abandoned.

 

The social centre supports families in feeding, clothing and providing shelter for their children, as well as ensuring that the children attend school and make progress in their learning. The SOS Social Centre also provides health services, counselling and psychological support, as well as care and assistance for families affected by HIV/AIDS. Around 1,200 children and 300 adults benefit from the programme.

 

For children from the region who can no longer live with their parents, 15 SOS families can provide a loving home for up to 150 children. In each family, the children live with their brothers and sisters, affectionately cared for by their SOS mother.

 

The children attend the SOS Kindergarten together with children from the neighbourhood. There is also a class for children with special needs, where the Montessori Method of teaching is applied. The kindergarten ensures that children from SOS families make friends and are integrated into the local community from a young age.

In 2006, Kisumu was designated the first United Nations Millennium City in the world, and efforts to meet the Millennium Development Goals have been intensified.

 

Above all, these efforts include planning for an expanding urban population and meeting the demand for public services.

 

A rapidly growing informal sector cannot secure the livelihood of all

 

 Kisumu is a port city in Western Kenya and the capital of Nyanza Province. The SOS Children’s Village here is situated on the outskirts of Kisumu overlooking Lake Victoria. The city has a population of over 322,000 and is undergoing further rapid expansion due to the great number of internal migrants who come here in search of opportunity.

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But even though Kisumu is rich in natural resources, its once thriving industry has largely relocated to Nairobi or Mombasa. The people in the region are therefore predominantly poor and have very limited access to income-generating activities and basic social services.

 

Most people in Kisumu District make a living in subsistence agriculture or fishery, which makes for a very insecure livelihood. In the city, unemployment is high and most people eke out a living by means of informal work such as selling some merchandise on the streets. In fact, up to 45 per cent of families here live on less than a dollar per day.

 

Most families cannot afford two meals a day and malnutrition and stunted growth are very common in children. A great number of children heading the family Recent years have seen an increase in slums, which now form a belt around the city’s central business district.

 

The quality of the houses here – including the schools and nurseries – is very low and often unsafe. Drinking water is scarce in Kisumu, with only 40 per cent of the population receiving running water in their homes.

 

This affects people severely, and waterborne diseases such as cholera, dysentery and typhoid are widespread. In addition, in the slums there is a lack of sanitation, solid waste management, transportation, and health services. Kisumu District is one of the areas in the country that is severely affected by HIV/AIDS – at an estimated 24 per cent, HIV prevalence in Kisumu is the highest in all of Kenya. As a consequence, many children have been orphaned.

 

When parents die young, this often means that a child, usually the oldest sibling, becomes the head of the family. These children then do everything they can to put food on the table, which usually means they drop out of education and work to try and raise some money.

 

Children and young people are not usually aware of their rights and the support networks available to them are insufficient.

Our Impact

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SOS Early Childhood Education Kindergarten Icon
The SOS Kindergarten in Kenya are a fundamental building block for the early development needs including, intellectual and social skills for children.
1 KINDERGARTENS 36 Kindergarten students
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Medical Centre
SOS Medical Centres in Kenya provide quality health care to the children in our care, our staff, our staffís family as well as people in the surrounding community.
1 MEDICAL CENTRES 1133 Patients
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SOS Social Centre Icon
SOS Social Centres in Kenya aim is to help families, in particular women and children, living in communities neighbouring the SOS Children's Villages to gradually escape from poverty, and to help young people become self-reliant.
2 SOCIAL CENTRES 2385 Beneficiaries
Image
SOS Village Icon
The SOS Children's Village in Kenya provides loving homes to orphaned and abandoned children
1 VILLAGES 127 Orphaned and Abandoned Children

Our Impact

SOS Early Childhood Education Kindergarten Icon
KINDERGARTENS
The SOS Kindergarten in Kenya are a fundamental building block for the early development needs including, intellectual and social skills for children.
1
KINDERGARTENS
36
Kindergarten students
Medical Centre
MEDICAL CENTRES
SOS Medical Centres in Kenya provide quality health care to the children in our care, our staff, our staffís family as well as people in the surrounding community.
1
MEDICAL CENTRES
1133
Patients
SOS Social Centre Icon
SOCIAL CENTRES
SOS Social Centres in Kenya aim is to help families, in particular women and children, living in communities neighbouring the SOS Children's Villages to gradually escape from poverty, and to help young people become self-reliant.
2
SOCIAL CENTRES
2385
Beneficiaries
SOS Village Icon
VILLAGES
The SOS Children's Village in Kenya provides loving homes to orphaned and abandoned children
1
VILLAGES
127
Orphaned and Abandoned Children