Wednesday 8 February 2023

THE RWANDA GROUP TRUST

The Rwanda Group began in the 1980s through Joe and Rosemary Bamber working in the Missions and Third World Group in St. Gregory’s parish.

The ‘Rwanda Group Trust’ was established by deed in 1998.

The Objectives:  For assisting the poorest of the poor in the areas of  Poverty, health, education and shelter.

Trustees:  Michael Donlan, Myra Gregory, Mark Ibison, Veronica Sanders, Bernadette Roberts, and Clare Spicer and Judith Potts who joined us recently  after the death of their father, Joe Bamber.

Our 4 Rwandan Groups contacts are named below and they provide  reports on use of funds.

Cyangugu….Father Placide Manirakiza

Gikongoro…Petronille Uwizeye

Nyundo……..Fr. Fabian

Kigali………..Beatrice Murekatete

So as to be completely accountable to all, we request reports each quarter on the use of funds provided. We relay these along with any other relevant news to all our supporters either through email, posted or hand delivered newsletters.

Fundraising  Our main income was our Charity shop which operated with volunteers. Due to Covid and the fact that most of our volunteers were in the ‘vulnerable’ age group. we were forced to close the shop. We now rely on donations, sponsored events and car boot sales.


 RWANDA GROUP TRUST

(A charitable trust registered in England and Wales under number 1074656)

REPORT OF THE TRUSTEES

For

The year ended 31st December 2021                       

OBJECTIVES OF THE TRUST

The trust was established by deed on December 9th 1998 to advance the education and relieve the poverty and sickness of people in Rwanda.  The Trust took on the work of its predecessor organisation, The Rwanda Group, which had been working with the same objectives since 1983. 

RWANDA

Rwanda is a small landlocked country in Central Africa.  It has a predominantly rural population of approximately 12.5 million people.  It is one of the most densely populated countries in Africa. 2021 saw the 27th anniversary of the 1994 genocide when an estimated one million people lost their lives.  Much progress has been made in overcoming this disaster but there is still much more work required to complete the task.

Rwanda is a poor country with the bulk of its population living in considerable need.  World Bank figures show the average life expectancy at birth as approx. 69 years with 24 out of every 1000 children dying before reaching their fifth birthday. 

TRUSTEES 

The trustees are responsible for the assets, administration and work of the Trust. 

Mr Joseph Bamber together with his wife Rosemary,  R.I.P., and fellow trustee  Sister Mary McCarren  FCJ, began the work in 1983 after a visit to Rwanda and seeing the difficulties under which its people laboured.

Mr Bamber has overseen the growth and remarkable achievements of the charity since its registration in 1998. However in December 2021 he announced his decision to retire as a trustee.  He does continue to take a keen interest in its work. 

There are currently 5 trustees who meet together at least once per quarter. 

The current chair of the trust is Mr Michael Donlan.

The other trustees are Bernadette Roberts, Veronica Sanders, Mark Ibison and Myra Gregory.

STRATEGIES TO ACHIEVE THE OBJECTIVES OF THE TRUST 

The donor strategy is to fill some of the many gaps in provision left by the major aid charities with relatively small but effective gifts.  The help given is designed to be in the nature of help to friends by friends.  This is being accomplished by –

 

1)     Building friendships with communities, schools, individuals and families in need and providing help to them in this spirit.

2)     Establishing committees of Rwandans in the provinces of Rwanda to advise on need, opportunities to help and to assist in the distribution of grants.

 

The trust works to achieve these objectives through the excellent cooperation of 4 committees – in Kigali, Cyangugu, Gikongoro and Nyundo.

The funding strategy of the Trust is to make Rwanda, its people and their difficulties known to wider audiences and to accept donations of cash and goods for resale from those sympathetic to the objectives of the Trust.

The administrative strategy is to keep the work of the Trust as simple as possible and incur a minimum of expense in carrying it out.

 

FUNDRAISING

 

The year 2021 has seen a consolidation of the changes to our fund raising methods forced on us by the continuing difficulties with the Covid pandemic. The emphasis has been on increasing donations to the charity. Appeals have been launched in all the parishes of the Lancaster Catholic Diocese and the local parishes of the Liverpool and Salford dioceses. We have continued with the charity’s quarterly newsletter and are creating an ever expanding mailing list. Car boot sales and market stalls have also made significant contributions as well as a sponsored event. 

 

Income

 

Cash donations for 2021 amounted to a total of £42,763 an increase of approx £27,805 on last year.  This resulted in an increased gift aid refunds to £5,468. Sales of donated items of £588 resulted in a total income of £48,820.

 

Expenditure

 

In 2021 the Trust made grants of £30,400 to the four committees in Rwanda for distribution to the poorest in their communities as deemed appropriate by them and in accordance with the trust's objectives. The Trust also made grants of £8,730 towards various projects in Rwanda. The addition of bank charges of £120 resulted

in a total expenditure of £39,250. The net increase of the charity’s income over last year was approximately  £12,280.    

COMMUNICATION & FUTURE PLANS 

Our foremost means of communication is now our quarterly newsletter. This has proved to be a very effective way of informing donors how their donations are being used to help the poorest of the poor.  It also accounts largely for the wonderful increase in donations.   

It is intended to continue to sell donated items through such as market stalls, car boot sales and seasonal fairs.

Also we have plans to develop our website to increase its versatility for information giving and provide an alternative and easier ways to donate.

We will continue to produce information leaflets and submit articles in local magazines and newspapers as well as advertising in supermarkets and churches throughout the Lancaster diocese.

Donations can continue to be given through the methods explained on our website at:-  Rwandagrouptrust.blogspot.com 

We are always looking for potential opportunities to promote our work in the wider community. 

The trustees agreed, as last year, that our priority will continue to be our ongoing commitments and only to take on new projects when funds are available. 

Finally I would like to thank all our volunteers, donors and supporters for their dedication resulting in such a successful year for the charity. 

KEEPING IN TOUCH 

The address of the Trust is: 17 Mayfield Road Ashton Preston, 

PR2 1EX 

Email: rwandagrouptrust.org@gmail.com 

Website: rwandagrouptrust.blogspot.com

 

This Report was approved by the Trustees & Signed on their behalf  by the chair 

Michael Donlan. 

20th April  2022

                                                                                           

 

Talk for Holocaust Memorial Day

The story of how the Rwanda Group Trust came into being really begins in 1981 in the small town of Kibeho in Rwanda.  That was the year that Our Lady first appeared to 3 teenage schoolgirls at Kibeho High School (apparitions which were  officially approved by the Vatican in 2001).  Our Lady requested prayer, deeper faith and repentance; she also specifically predicted – 12 years before it happened – the 1994 genocide in which she said a “river of blood” would flow across Rwanda if people didn’t stop harbouring hatred for each other.  Sadly these warnings weren’t heeded and the historic tensions between the Hutus and Tutsis erupted into the genocide of 1994 when an estimated one million people were killed in only 100 days.  During that period, men, women and even children were literally “torn from their homes” and murdered. The appalling violence and suffering that occurred during and immediately following the genocide was movingly recounted by a survivor, Immaculee Ilibagiza, in her book “Left to Tell”.  In the book she recounts how she and 7 other women hid silently in a cramped bathroom for 91 days whilst machete wielding killers hunted for them.  Immaculee survived her ordeal and was able, through the power of prayer, to forgive those who had murdered most of her family.

As a result of the genocide approximately 95,000 Rwandan children were orphaned, many of whom had psychological scars because of the extreme violence and murders they witnessed.  Before 1994, Rwanda had just 4 orphanages but after the genocide many, many more were immediately needed.   Today, Rwanda actually has one of Africa’s fastest growing economies, but 63% of the population still live in extreme poverty and many people are still suffering from the effects of the genocide.

The story of the Preston based Rwanda Group Trust is interwoven with events in Rwanda before and after the genocide.  Preston teacher, Joe Bamber, had set up a third world support group at St Gregory’s parish in 1977 and had made links with Rwanda through a religious sister who was working there.  Visits were made to Rwanda in 1983 and again in 1987 before the genocide, when Joe took several students from Newman College.  A further visit in 1995 revealed the devastation caused by the genocide, including wrecked schools and houses and the 95,000 children orphaned across the country. 

This prompted Joe to redouble his efforts to raise much needed funds through car boot sales, raffles and other parish events.  Our charity shop was opened in the year 2000 under the auspices of the newly constituted Rwanda Group Trust.  (Which I’ll now refer to as the RGT)

4 committees have now been set up by the RGT throughout Rwanda comprised of local priests, religious sisters and lay people who receive the monies sent by the RGT and distribute according to need.  The overriding principle is to “help the poorest of the poor in the fields of health, food, shelter and education”. 

I’ll now mention a few projects which we have funded to give a flavour of how the money is used.  The Kabuga Health Centre was funded by the RGT – this project provides health care for a large area.  One of its most important activities is with the victims of AIDS.  Mothers who come there who are HIV positive are able to be treated with a drug which prevents their babies from contracting AIDS in the womb.  This is clearly a very significant new development in stopping the spread of AIDS.  In the area of food, we have a very active Goats project running in Rwanda.  A £30 donation funds one goat for a family – these are very sought after as they fulfil a number of functions.  They provide plentiful protein rich milk and they are also used for breeding and at the end of their lives, they provide meat and goat skins.  Another recent project has been funding £780 to provide a well and a piped water supply to a whole village community.  In our earlier days as a Trust, we were providing funds to build or repair many houses for widows of the genocide.  We also now provide funds for metal roofing materials which are now becoming compulsory and more recently several thousand pounds to repair damage caused by severe floods last year.  Probably the greatest proportion of our funds is used to provide education.  School fees are compulsory in Rwanda and are in the region of £120 per annum.  Many families cannot afford this even for one child.  Once in school they are often provided with a meal which in most cases is their only food of the day.  We also fund projects which provide these meals.

A milestone was reached 6 years ago when the total amount distributed by the RGT since its inception, passed £1 million pounds.  Cllr Veronica Afrin, the mayor of Preston at the time, visited our charity shop round the corner from here on Syke St, to commemorate the event. Our current total distributed is 

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