Our Projects

 

We have three schools in Uganda, educating over 750 children - two built and equipped from scratch, and the third based in rented buildings.

 We have also purchased land for a new school in a community with an estimated 800 children who are not currently in education. We are looking for a donor or corporate partner to help us kickstart the fundraising for this project and will start building the first classrooms as soon as we have secured £13,000.

 

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Joy Nursery & Primary School

The first Project Le Monde school started in 2011 .

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Gracious Junior

A small school with a reputation for music and excellent exam results serving a fishing community on the shores of Lake Victoria

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Radnor House at Namakoko

Our largest school providing 400 children with an education in a rural environment


Mpigi Land

Project Le Monde has helped the community in Mpigi – a community some 40kms outside Kampala - purchase a piece of land where we hope to build a school in future.

OTHER PROJECTS

We have links with Wakiso Secondary School near Kampala which will in future offer some of the children graduating from our primary schools with the rare opportunity to continue their education up until the age of 16. We also support the TAPP project which helps women with HIV living in Kampala’s slums develop entrepreneurial skills.

POSITIVE WOMEN, HEARTACHE, HOPE and LIVING WITH HIV

True to the spirit of its title, Positive Women doesn’t shrink away from contradiction, ambiguity or complexity. Instead, it shows how its six protagonists live with and through these conditions, facing them with humour, anger, resolve and defiance. This is not a happily-ever-after film, but one that—like some of the best anthropology—leaves you both unsettled and hopeful.

Liani Chua, Senior Lecturer in Anthropology, Brunel University.