Tuesday, May 24, 2011
MOSHI, TANZANIA--More than 100 members of the
Drake University and CONADEIP All-Stars traveling parties for the Global
Kilimanjaro Bowl have volunteered three days of their time to benefit service
projects in the Tanzanian city of Moshi.
Orchestrated
by the Ames, Iowa-based organization IRIS (Iowa Resource for International Service), the 11 initiatives
range from building construction to painting. Those taking part also have an opportunity to enjoy a day on
safari at the Tarangirie National Park as a benefit of the TANAPA presenting
sponsorship of the event.
The Drake Bulldogs won the Global
Kilimanjaro Bowl with a 17-7 fourth quarter-comeback in
front of 11,781 curious but enthusiastic Tanzania spectators at the Sheik Amri
Abedi Memorial Stadium.
"We are extremely grateful to
everyone involved in the Global Kilimanjaro Bowl for giving time and energy,"
said Del Christensen, Executive Director of IRIS. "The goal overall is to reinforce the volunteer spirit
within Moshi and to work with the local youth to improve facilities."
IRIS is a non-profit, non-religious organization founded in
1993 and located in Ames, Iowa. Its mission is to promote international
understanding, diversity and peace. Through several grant programs, IRIS
brings students, journalists, business people, educators and government leaders
to Iowa from Africa, Central and Eastern Europe and Asia.
**Additional Online Resources--Go Inside The Journey:
Drake President Dr. David Maxwell's blog | Drake Players' blog
Drake AD Sandy Hatfield Clubb's Twitter | Global Football's Twitter
Drake Football Facebook | Kilimanjaro Bowl Facebook
Global Football's YouTube Channel | Drake Player Cam Good's video blog
Drake Players' blogs for the Des Moines Register
E.J. Walter's blog for the National Football Foundation's website
The
members of both traveling parties began their projects in full force on Monday, May 23,
while others visited the orphanage funded by the Siouxland Tanzania Educational
Medical Ministries (Stemm).
While
working in the Moshi area, the volunteers will:
- Build a girls dormitory at Kitaa Hope Orphanage, home to 4 to
12-year-old children who have been orphaned as a result of HIV/AIDS.
- Interact with children at the Mkombozi Centre for Street Children, where
students receive literacy, health and human rights education.
- Repair buildings, clean grounds and assist with gardening at Safe Haven
Orphanage, which houses 45 orphans and has the capacity to take in up to 80.
- Install window shutters, build a new room for a nursery and interact
with students at Shaurimoyo Primary School for the Disabled, where children
with disabilities receive support.
- Build a teachers' house at Tema Secondary School. Teachers must currently walk to the
school, which is located in the foothills of Mount Kilimanjaro.
- Build a new classroom at Bridge Nursery School, which currently has two
teachers and 11 pupils aged 3 to 5-years-old. Students learn mathematics, art, singing, stories and games.
- Repair walls and paint three dilapidated classrooms at Mawenzi Secondary
School.
- Construct soccer and netball goals at Soweto Primary School
- Clear a soccer field and play a game with some of the 180 youth that
attend Kelolani Community School.
- Plant trees and improve sports facilities at Rau Primary School.
- Provide netball and volleyball facilities at the Al-Huda Centre
Orphanage for Muslim girls.
Drake
University Athletic Director Sandy Hatfield Clubb and her family spent a night
in a remote village in the Mount Kilimanjaro foothills on Sunday as the
traveling parties relocated from Arusha to Moshi.
"It was
a very humbling experience," she said.
"These people have to walk several miles every day just to collect water
to be able to enjoy some of life's simple comforts that we take for
granted.
"Three
generations of my family stayed overnight and we were made extremely
welcome. My children played with
the children of the village and everyone was incredibly happy. It was an experience we will never
forget."
The Kitaa Orphanage service
project will be coordinated through the efforts of the Iowa Resources for International Service (IRIS) and Stemm as the student athletes from both
teams, numbering 110 in total, will spend three days (May 22-24) working at
local private orphanage to improve their facilities.
Stemm was specifically created to
develop a relational bridge between Siouxland and Tanzania by addressing the
priorities of spiritual growth, medical care, and educational
opportunities. In building this relationship, the overwhelming AIDS
orphan crisis was one that could not be ignored and today is also an integral
part of the STtemm ministry. Since
inception, Stemm groups have traveled to Tanzania on a semi-annual basis -
January and July each year.
Event contact: Patrick Steenberge Patrick@GlobalFootball.com (011-255) (0) 762 379-437
Media contact: Michael
Preston MP@MPrestonSports.com (011-255)
(0) 757 894-392
About Global Football: Headed
by President Patrick Steenberge, a former Notre Dame quarterback and high
school All-American at Erie Cathedral Prep. During the past 14 years,
Global Football has produced football games in 18 nations in North and Central
American, Europe, Asia and Oceania. Working partners include NFL, NFL Super
Bowl Host Committees, American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Notre Dame,
Penn State, Pop Warner, USA Football, and numerous Division III colleges as
well as National Football Federations worldwide. www.globalfootball.com.