Providing financial support and hardship relief to the orphans and vulnerable children of Ekudzeni.
Co-funding with the ALMT allows individuals, other Trusts and Foundations, and Companies to contribute funds directly to individual, vetted and approved, project partnerships. With fifteen years of experience awarding grants and working in partnership with children’s organisations around the world, the ALMT is best placed to support you in your philanthropy.
Lynn Nestor and her family were chosen in 2001 to live for three months in a village called Ekudzeni (meaning Far Away) near Manzini in Swaziland. It was one of the first reality programmes for TV. They went with their three children then 12, 7 and 4. What started as an experiment became their home. The village is small and the only school was over ten miles away and up a mountain. There was no transport attached to the village. If the children could not make the school journey, they were not educated.
Lynn and her husband Robert were inspired to help build a village school. They approached the village Chief, who gave them a patch of land for the school. They raised enough for foundations to be laid. Local people were largely responsible for the building. The school was very simple with no electricity. When the government heard about the school, they gave them a teacher on the condition that a house would be built for her and that there would be proper toilets built and proper fencing around. In the expectation of this being carried out, the Government also gave them a simple bus service so that children from outlying villages could come to the school. Sadly Lynn and Robert ran out of money and still needed to build the teacher house and open up the other two classrooms, fence the area and have a proper running water supply at the school so they could give the children a breakfast when they got to school.
In 2012, the ALMT made a grant to complete the teacher’s accommodation, the buildings, buy the furnishings, pay for the boundary fence, pay the teacher’s salaries and buy stationery and recreational playground equipment for the Angus Lawson Primary School.
S.A.F.E. uses interactive theatre and film to educate and inspire young people in some of Kenya’s most remote and vulnerable communities.
Footsteps provides intensive physiotherapy for children with cerebral palsy and other neurological disorders, giving them the support they need to achieve their unique potential.
Epic Partners is a community based charity that uses support, networks and diversionary activities to enrich the lives of children, young people and families
Forever Angels believes all children should be raised in a loving family. Their first priority is family preservation.