One of the young beneficiaries of the project. Source: Lifeline Energy
One of the young beneficiaries of the project. Source: Lifeline Energy
Un grupo de mujeres muestra sus nuevas radios. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Un grupo de mujeres muestra sus nuevas radios. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
En Ruanda el acceso a la educación e información es muy limitado. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
En Ruanda el acceso a la educación e información es muy limitado. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Una mujer muestra su recién recibida radio. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Una mujer muestra su recién recibida radio. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Dos niños felices con las radios. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Dos niños felices con las radios. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Las radios son autorrecargables, por lo que no necesitan pilas. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Las radios son autorrecargables, por lo que no necesitan pilas. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Un grupo de mujeres al aire libre alrededor de una radio. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Un grupo de mujeres al aire libre alrededor de una radio. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Un grupo de beneficiarios recibe formación sobre el uso de las radios. Fuente: Lifeline Energy
Un grupo de beneficiarios recibe formación sobre el uso de las radios. Fuente: Lifeline Energy

Social Issue

Even though Rwanda is becoming a role model country in developing its economy, there are still 100,000 families that are headed by an orphan child. No adults. No fathers or mothers. Children, often as young as 9 years old, have to look after their younger brothers and sisters, subsisting in extreme poverty by cultivating a small plot of land or working for neighbours. In these conditions going to school is a dream and they do not have the basic and essential information required for life that they would have received from their parents.

Our Response

The project consists of distributing radios that do not need batteries, as these are impossible to buy and find, so that children receive practical information on health, cultivation methods, food in general, human rights, and school education.

The donation of radios goes alongside a programme implemented in the country that tracks or tutors orphaned children, carried out by Nkundabanas. These are adults from the same community that, after a week’s training, are given five families of orphaned children to look after, which they visit at least once per week.

One of the programmes that is most popular with the children and of great emotional value is the radio series Urunana, which deals with a wide range of day to day social issues and teaches the most basic human values to children whilst providing a great sense of security and emotional comfort. The emotional link between the characters in the radio series and the children is such that many children consider them as second parents due to the amount of things that they teach and the way they do so.

Expected Social Impact

It seems incredible that an item as simple as a radio can change a person’s life, not only due to the usefulness of the information that it can provide but also due to the emotional damage that it can help to heal.

Each radio is awarded to a specific child, although ten children listen to it on average, either in the field, tilling the land, or meeting at one of their homes.