Common Wealth Meeting

Uganda is proud to be the official host of the common wealth heads of governments meeting which will be held in Kampala coming November 2007 with the queen of England being the chief guest.

Greetings to everyone. Its been a longtime since I last logged in here.

Lincoln Joel Nsubuga.
www.pastorlincoln.faithweb.com

Welcomes you to the Powerful Healing Services.

Prophet John Foundation Church
Welcomes you to the Powerful Healing Services.
We are inviting Christians from allover the world to come and visit our church in the powerful healing Sunday services during the month of December 2005. Bring the sick, those with brain damages, the deamon possesed, lame, unemployed, cursed, leprosy, asthma, deaf and dumb and those suffering from Aids. No matter what you have gone through Come and experience the miracles and power of God and then take back the good news home. Prophet John Foundation Church is located in the heart of Kampala City. Come in Nakivubo Settlement Primary School and ask for city centre main hall.
Why don’t you give yourself a try! Come and meet Jesus Christ for He has got an answer and a solution to all your problems.
Please send us your prayer requests for a special prayer. We are ready to pray for you even via the phone from wherever you reach us. God bless you Brother and Sister.
Here is the full address of the church:
Prophet John Foundation Church
P.O. Box 29248, Kampala – Uganda
East Africa.
Tel: Pastor Samuel Nsubuga +25677415884
Pastor Lincoln Joel Nsubuga +25677610441.
Email: prophetjohnfoundationchurch@yahoo.co.uk
pastorlincolnjoel@praize.com
evangelist_nsubuga@yahoo.ca
Home Page: www.prophetjohnfoundationchurch.4t.com

The Life, People & Church

The church community in Uganda is one of the biggest communities today. There are so many churches in Uganda today; from The catholic to Anglican churches, then Lutheran and Charismatic to Pentecostal churches. In Uganda we have so many churches today and some few examples I can give include; Prophet John Foundation Church (our church), Kansanga Miracle Centre, Rubaga Miracle Centre Cathedral, Eden Revival church, Kampala Pentecostal Church, Full Gospel Church, Baptist Church, Presbyterian church, Orthodox and so many churches. Some churches are new establish and others have stayed for so long. Taking a case study of our church;
It is an upcoming powerful and spiritual church Uganda which is not yet fully equipped with instruments, no church projects, no church transport and many other needs. Though it has managed to save many lives that is to say three mad people where healed after a power prayer in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior. Many have managed to start small businesses, other have been married and ripped from the curse, the barren have produced children and the school going children have passed well and doing well in their education. Though we are powerful in the word of prayer and faith “Matthew 21:22.” We still have a long way to go. Some parents have failed to get school fees for their children in that many of them don’t work that’s why our church targets some projects to employ these church members that they can have something to do and get income out of it. We look at the projects like; tailoring, salon, making of crafts, pay phone attendancy, poultry keeping, animal raring, restaurants and so on. Our church is dominated by the people with low level education and illiterate. There are few literate people and those have got access to office jobs. The majority have self owned jobs on small scale like; fruits vendoring, restaurants, crop growing, shops, market vendors and tailors.
Given support, aid and provision of loans, the church members can expand their activities and those without jobs can start own businesses on small scale basis and expand as God blesses them and as time goes by. Despite the problems and short comings we have encountered and experienced along the way, the church has managed to achieve some goals at a higher level that is to say;
1)    We have injected good morals in the members.
2)    We have mobilized them on how to do developed themselves through small scale business projects.
3)    We have spread the message to the youth to abstain from sex and wait for the right timing of God in order to avoid Aids and other problems like un wanted pregnancies.
4)    We have injected the love of God in them.
5)    We have sponsored one child so far to go in school since the church collection is very low leaving many stranded.

With God everything is possible, we do believe that we shall achieve all our pre-determined objectives in the Long-run.
The church also has played an important role in the economic development of Uganda.
We welcome people to join us in our prayer meetings every Sunday from 9:00a.m. to 2:00p.m. East African time.
Prophet John Foundation Church we rent the hall of Kawaala College School behind Owino Market. While in Uganda please visit us. We pray for the sick, the oppressed the broken hearted, the deaf, the dumb and all kinds of problems.
Love the Lord your God and remember Jesus Christ is coming back soon. Rev. 3:10-11″
MAY THE GOOD LORD BLESS YOU ALL.
Pastor Lincoln Joel Nsubuga.
Tel: 00 256 77610441.

P.O. Box 29248, Kampala – Uganda
East Africa.

VENDORS & STREET BUSINESS IN UGANDA IN REGARDS TO SURVIVAL OF A LOW LEVEL UGANDA

Uganda is a developing country in the third world. It is located in the Eastern Province of Africa known as East Africa. Uganda’s economy is based on the agricultural sector where by most products on the market are agro-based products followed by others. The agro based products dominate the market for the low level Ugandans like myself. The agro- based products on the market include; beans, rice, maize, matooke, tomatoes, cassava, irish potatoes, sweet potatoes, cabbages, green vegetables, yams etc. the prices for these produces ranges from 500-2000/= a kilo and Matooke costs 6000-8000/= a full bunch. Cassava to potatoes costs from 1000/= to 3000/= per each heap. Even though the prices are not so high but you find many low level Ugandans like me bargaining to get the enough of what you need or to have a price reduced because like now if I can get 2000 or 3000/= in a day how am I going to survive? It means I will use the money I get from salary carefully till it runs up to a full month and sometimes that money stops a quarter way of a full month. Surviving in Uganda is so hard and you can thank God when you have a small garden around home to grow some crops and fruits.
Markets for these products are almost everywhere around the city and though the City Council banned street vendoring, vendors still flock the streets and the main problem they face is capturing their produces by the City Council officials when caught. Secondly prices are high and the competition is very high so it even forces some vendors to leave the markets to come on the streets and target a chance for a day’s income.
Other products on the streets sold by these vendors include; plastics, toys for children, electronics, music cassettes, DVD’s, used clothes, used bags, umbrellas and kitchen utencils, electrical appliances,
I cannot forget the fruits; the some people sell fruits from the streets to shops and supermarkets and even offices where you are allowed to enter when called by someone who wants to buy from you. Fruits sold by these people include; bananas, mangoes, guavas, oranges, passion fruits, jack fruit, sugarcane and apples. One vendor can walk almost two miles and end up selling fruits worth 2000/= and its on the same money you have to get a new stock so life becomes so hard which has forced some young ladies to sell their bodies on the street corners for money. Having failed in life many young women flock the bars and do prostitution charging 2000/= to 3000/= even when they know that AIDS kills. Young men are playing games during the day and in the night steal because of the hard life we are going through. I am lucky to be a born again Christian because am also going through a difficult life with myself, Angela and Daniel and again my mothers asks me for some financial help when I can’t even support her. Sometimes I ask myself why God has divided us and made some rich and others poor. There are few privilledged Ugandans. Many of us are even sleeping badly, on old bedsheets torn and torn blankets. Myself I don’t allow people to enter my room till I will buy somethings and even buy some bedsheets, blanket and curtain. I have hope in the Lord that things will change someday. I pity others also because there are so many who are even worse.
The survival of we low level Ugandans lie mostly in created jobs like vendoring and projects to crop growing etc. Some people only need capital but a lot can be done. Others make chapattis and charge each chapatti 200/. The common meal for the low level Ugandans is chapatti and beans then a cup of tea finishing a cost of 600/.
I myself buy clothes from the vendors on the street just like the people of my class because I cannot afford a trouser of 15,000 or a shirt of 20,000/= which is new. The shoes also cost 20,000/= to 40,000/=.
That’s all about the Vendors, Street business and life we’re going through we low level Ugandans.
Comments are welcome.
God bless you all.
Pastor Lincoln Joel Ns

THE ONLY WAY TO THE FUTURE

My names are Lincoln Joel Nsubuga, I was born on 26/March/1973 in Mulago Hospital the biggest government Hospital. I come from a family of seven. I live in Makindye town which is 3kms from Kampala city centre. Kampala is the capital city of Uganda.
Greetings to all the members of the Booman Tribune Community. When I sat at home on Sunday/17th/July/2005 in the evening; I started thinking over and again and asked myself why I still fail to catch up with the world and I realized that I don’t have to give up with the chances on the Booman Tribune. I want to start a POULTRY KEEPING Project with 300 chicks (200 broilers and 100 layers) this will help me and my family, some members of the church who are not employed. This Project when started will help us get some income to sustain ourselves and our family and also invest in other progressive projects like crop growing.
Angela and Daniel’s future also forces me to find something I can set up to get some income which will help me fund their education.
I have gone a through a real hard life in this world all because I did not have a chance to accomplish my studies and this was because my father had retired and my mother was retrenched having worked for Mulago Hospital for 25yrs.
I was only left with college studies to get a certificate or diploma which would help me get a job. Having seen that I have failed to find any solution for my continuing studies, I sat home and later on joined the church to find new life. Though the church has helped me a lot in building my morals, faith and hope but still without something, you cannot change the lifestyle.
To all those who are will to support this project start, you can donate to the paypal account which we have finally opened up by simply clicking on this link; http://projectafrica.blogspot.com               And to those who are willing to send clothes and toys to Angela and Daniel, send them to the postal address below;
Pastor Lincoln Joel Nsubuga
P.O. Box 29248, Kampala – Uganda
East Africa.
Change my world today and I change the world of others. Today or tomorrow, we shall all live a happy life.
God bless you all.
Pastor Lincoln Joel Nsubuga
Evangelist_nsubuga@yahoo.ca
NB: Angela and Daniel’s photo are on the Booman Tribune in one of my diaries and the donations to the project start up on the Project Africa page by simply clicking on the link above.

I would also like to start a new life and get rid of the life I have been living. I don’t have the bedsheets myself; they are all torn and blanket also. Are there members who can provide me with these? If so you can send them to this address.
Ps. Lincoln Joel Nsubuga
P.O. Box 29248, Kampala – Uganda
East Africa.
I also need to get a curtain; my life is not good despite the fact that am always hopeful. You can believe my words when you come and visit me in Makindye. I can show you everything that I have . I don’t have saucepans, plates and cups I have few but I will get those in due time.
What I need also are the chairs in the house and stools the set costs 240,000/= Uganda Shillings equal to $150. Cupboard 100,000/= Uganda Shillings equal $60
I humbly ask you members to give me a start in my life. I will be happy. A Paypal was set up simply click on the link above
Just help me get a start. I do believe there are people willing to help. I call upon you to support me start a Poultry project as well. We want to start with 300 chicks as I mentioned above. So whatever you can donate to our Paypal account, will help us a lot. Here is my email address incase you need more information from me; E-mail: evangelist_nsubuga@yahoo.ca
The church provides us with phone services so you can get me on this phone number; 00-256-77 610441.

Third Term Goes Through What is your Opinion!

It has taken a while as the members of the Parliament of Uganda have been debating on whether the current president should be given a “Third Term.” Today news resources say “Third Term has gone through.” What do you think about this?
The majority of the Ugandans including me do support the current president though in one way or another there are some oppressing majors here and there.
When I remember the years before 1986, Uganda was swiming in the pool of bloodshed, torture, massacre under the aggressive dictatorial leadership. The human rights where swinging on the tree branches and none of the branches could be cut down because the trees were very tall and strong.
In 1986 the new government came into power (National Resistance Movement). This was the birth of new life in Uganda, birth of peace and freedoms entitled to man. I can see many developments hanging up though there are some downfalls here there forexamples; taxes have become so hard and increased, employement opportunities are limited, education has become expensive forexample a person like me who never completed my education I see no future for me because I don’t hold any qualification to get a job except the ordinary and advanced certificates of education.
So what do you think can be done to see the balanced society?
According to me, what I can do now is to start a project with the help from you people in order to stand a chance of living successful in the next life.
I look at poultry keeping project and crop growing as the key projects followed by others.
The must be something done for the youth and children. I look at myself as one of the figures mobilising the unprivilledged class of people in my community and advising them on how to develop giving an example of the project in place.
God bless you all.
Pastor Lincoln Joel Nsubuga
evangelist_nsubuga@yahoo.ca

Trying A Future For My Two Kids Angela & Daniel

Greetings to you all in the Booman Tribune Community. I have liked this community so much ever since I was introduced here by Mom Diane. I have found comfort, I have been encouraged and inspired. My names are Pastor Lincoln Joel Nsubuga. I talked about the life of my mother and now am talking about the life of my two kids; Angela Joanna Namubiru and Daniel Mubiru. Daniel is aged 3 and half years and Angela is aged 2 years. Daniel has reached the time of going to school but still up to now I look for a job which can help me fulfill this. I work in the internet cafe for part time getting 80,000/= (Uganda Shillings) every month which is equal to $50 when changed to American dollars. Angela has always been sick and even as I talk she has just recovered from sickness. There is a friend who provided us with some clothes for both of them she was a lady from America and she gave us those clothes in September last year. I thank God for that. She is called Paulette. A. Green. Angela’s sickness has taken almost what could help Daniel join school. Life is a struggle in Africa when you have no qualifications to help you find a good job. If my father had not retired in 1994, I would have finished my studies. Now I serve God as one of the Pastors in our church and this is done voluntarily because our church is not yet rich.
If I can get someone to help me pay for Daniel school fees then I can save some money from the salary and prepare for Angela when she joins Nursery School also. Nursery School here requires; registration fee of 5000/= Which is $5, Fees 40,000/= which is $30 and uniform 25,000/= which is $17.
A nursery school here takes 3 years and then a child joins primary one.
I do believe that if God helps me also I will go and do a course to help me find a job. Life has been so difficult for me. But in all God has helped me to see the children growing amidst hard times. Days of sickness and where there was no food. Tears can do nothing for it is only God who knows the future.
Having seen how life has been for me, I will try to help others someday when I prosper and be an example though some people failed to help me even my relatives. I have always strived alone with my mother. I have done all sorts of simple jobs here to get some money for survival. I thank Paulette. A. Green who provided us with some clothes and also Rev. Marcia Defnet of living word ministries in USA. sent us some clothes in the year 2002 for Daniel.
God bless you all.
NB: I would like to post Daniel and Angela’s photo but I don’t how I can do it here.

My Contact Address:
E-mail: evangelist_nsubuga@yahoo.ca
pastorlincolnjoel@praize.com

Postal Address is;
Lincoln Joel Nsubuga
P.O. Box 29248, Kampala – Uganda
East Africa.

My Mother and Her Life Along The Way.

I have a lot to talk about my mother who gave birth to me on 26/March/1973 in Mulago Hospital. I grew up with my mother who was hardworking. She worked as a midwife nurse for 25 years in Mulago hospital and retired in 1997-1998. The little money she used to get catered for the family of five who were at home including me. We had a garden at home where she grew banana plantations and cassava, rice, maize and beans. Many times, we fed on the produce from the garden. The salary she got was not all that enough and we used to receive little help from my father and this always happened once in a while.
Hers names in full: Margaret Mukiibi Nakabugo. She was born to a family of 12 and there way of life was so difficult that they used to walk 8 miles everyday on foot and bare footed to go to school. After retiring she started a small medical centre which also collapsed after a while and now she treats people from home who rarely come. I suggest that given ability and sponsorship to re-begin the medical centre for treating people, she can do it. She is a loving Mom who raised us with good morals. She used to cain us whenever we did wrong and thank God that we are well behaved in the society.
She has skills in mid-wifery, maternity, and also treating people. I can say that she is well skilled in the medical profession but its a pity today to see that she is at home seated after her small medical centre collapsed due to lack of capital and rent.

She is hospitable to many people. As I talk now, our home is a resort of many visitors most especially our friends.
She also has skills in poultry keeping and agriculture.
That is the way of life of my mother.
If we had access to capital she would resume her medical centre but this time starting it in a vacant place.

Contact Address for My mother;

E-mail: magruthmukiibi@yahoo.com

For the Postal Address;
Margaret Ruth Mukiibi
P.O. Box 29248, Kampala – Uganda
East Africa.

Women of Uganda

Case study of the UWESO (Uganda women’s effort to save the orphans) I am not one of them but I have been following their activities, services and continued support to the orphans of Uganda under the patronship of the first lady Janet Museveni.
For over eighteen years now, the Ugandan women have played an important role in the development of Uganda through several initiatives like children projects, orphanages and other societies as regards development in the economic and social welfare of the people in the communities they serve.
I am depicting a case study from the UWESO community organisation which has been lady by the First Lady of Uganda for the past years. (Lincoln Joel Nsubuga)
The Continued Success of a Women’s NGO: The Uganda Women’s Efforts to Save Orphans (UWESO)
After almost two decades of civil war in Uganda (1971 – late 1980s), the Ugandan economy and society were in ruins, poverty in the rural areas being particularly severe. Social services and infrastructure were dangerously depleted and rural health care, water supplies, sanitation, roads and telecommunications were inoperative.
The country’s recovery over the last decade has, however, been striking. The Government has restored law and order in most areas and has set in motion a wide-spread, decentralized democratization process. Rehabilitation of the economy has been made possible by effective government programmes underwritten by the donor community, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, and by market-oriented structural adjustment policies. The achievement of annual GDP growth rates averaging 5% in real terms has been made possible by assistance from external donors, effective government programmes, a resurgent private sector and, most importantly, by private initiatives on the part of Ugandan civil society.
Of the multitudinous victims of civil strife, the saddest and the most vulnerable were the many orphans who had been left homeless, were mostly suffering from malnutrition and were exposed to disease, especially malaria, gastroenteritis, and tuberculosis. In the Ugandan context, orphans are children of less than 18 years of age who have lost one or (commonly) both parents, initially due to civil strife but increasingly because of the burgeoning Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) epidemic that now affects the entire country. In the latter case, the father usually dies first and is quickly followed by the mother, mostly due to malaria, which destroys body resistance. The orphans are doubly penalized because not only are they deprived and vulnerable, but the foster family that takes them in usually comes from the most vulnerable groups. The heads of the foster families are overwhelmingly female, i.e. surviving widows, elderly grandmothers, often a female teenager, aunts or cousins who themselves face serious labour constraints in terms of food production and farming, as well as inheritance problems and reduced purchasing power and creditworthiness – all of which reduce their food security, nutritional status and schooling. A recent study showed that the magnitude of the problem is large and likely to become greater. There are about 1.6 million orphans in Uganda, i.e. about 18% of the estimated 9 million children under 18 years of age, and these numbers are likely to grow to about 2 million by the year 2002. The traditional caring mechanisms of the extended rural African families are stretched to a maximum because one family out of every four is now looking after children that are not their own.
Support to this particularly vulnerable group is provided by UWESO, a national voluntary NGO that was founded by a group of Ugandan women in 1986 to address the orphan problem and is based on the mobilization of women volunteers in rural areas who are not paid and initially received no support. Membership now numbers about 10 000 women throughout the country, but, as of July 1998, UWESO still had a full-time staff of only about 25. The NGO operates outside of the government structure and administration and relies on voluntary efforts (in terms of time and resources) at the grass-roots level and on whatever external or domestic support that can be mobilized. UWESO began as a relief agency that distributed food and medicines in war-torn areas and gradually extended its activities to providing welfare assistance to needy orphans. An earlier activity was to sponsor the school fees of orphans attending primary school. Prior to 1994, UWESO’s activities were constrained by the small scale of its funding, i.e. membership fees, locally generated funds, individual contributions and limited bilateral grants. However, in 1995, the BSF.JP provided a major boost to the NGO by financing a UWESO Development Project (UDP). The grant of USD 1.45 million for the period up to July 1999 made it possible to build on the innovative and cost-effective action of volunteer members and to establish the first phase of a structured development project. The BSF.JP first of all strengthened the capacity of the small national secretariat through technical support, skills training and resources to create a proper financial control capability, basic transport and equipment. It subsequently funded investments and operational costs so that UWESO activities could be decentralized to branches at the district level and to support income-generating activities for targeted foster families and orphans. IFAD appointed UNOPS as the cooperating institution for administering and supervising the BSF.JP grant to UWESO.
With the help of the BSF.JP project, UWESO has evolved into a development organization with a small core of full-time professional staff and a strengthened management, fund-raising and implementation capacity. The organization’s approach has shifted to empowerment of foster families and, as reflected in the 1995 mission statement, it now seeks to improve the quality of life of needy orphans by empowering local communities to meet the social, moral and economic needs of this core of children in a sustainable way.
At the beneficiary level, the UDP has had a positive impact on foster families, as shown by household surveys undertaken during the interim evaluation and the Rapid Rural Appraisals (RRAs) undertaken in selected villages. The savings and credit services have been especially popular. The rural finance system and associated income-generating activities, effectively backed up by intensive training for beneficiaries in bookkeeping and business management, successfully introduced individual loans through groups. This involved some 1 875 persons, of whom 87% were women. In all, 4 000 loans were advanced, equivalent to a cumulative total of about USD 400 000 at prevailing interest rates. Overall loan recovery rates were about 90% and were lower only in the northern districts where there is still a degree of local insecurity. The savings and credit services helped boost the incomes of foster parents which meant that living conditions improved, small-scale businesses prospered and 10 000 children were kept in school. Since the majority of clients are widows, about half those children are likely to be orphans. Thanks to these services, UWESO members and clients are now introducing a regular savings habit.
Orphan sponsorships funded under the project have had a mixed impact, but the most successful innovation was the introduction of informal vocational training of orphans on the part of local artisans for one year. Practical skills training was provided by local artisans living near the families in order to meet neighbourhood needs such as bicycle and radio repairs, carpentry and tailoring, and the scheme was open to children as young as 12 years. Despite UWESO’s efforts, boys outnumbered girls in taking up such training because of the high dropout rate of girls from non-traditional trades. However, UDP sponsorships of primary school and formal vocational schools did not prove to be cost-effec-tive and had a limited impact. The support of such school sponsorships by UWESO reflects a residual relief orientation from the past rather than a new focus on empowerment and development.
The project has strengthened UWESO’s capacity as an institution through enhanced staff training based on a training needs assessment in management communication, financial control and computer skills. As a result, the preparation of annual workplans and budgets has been to professional standards, with timely reporting and no qualification of the annual audits.
Overall, the UWESO project has made it possible for the NGO to make the transition from one-off welfare-oriented operations for the benefit of single orphans to a development approach that targets all members of the foster families caring for the orphans. Operations have been decentralized to volunteer branches, which cover five of the country’s 45 districts. UWESO has gone from being a local welfare-oriented NGO to a diversified provider of services with emphasis on development and empowerment. In this respect, a major innovation pioneered by UWESO in Uganda’s rural areas has been the introduction of an effective rural savings and credit scheme. The NGO’s past advocacy of school places for orphans contributed to the Government’s decision to restart the Universal Primary Education Programme in January 1997, under which free education is provided for four children in every family and for all orphans thus making it unnecessary for civil groups such as UWESO to sponsor school places for orphans. UWESO’s learning culture, which stresses in-service training, and the adoption of promising ideas from external training institutions and lecturers, will foster the sustained growth of the NGO.
The internationally renowned Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami, who visited Uganda at the invitation of IFAD and BSF in April 2000, produced a documentary on UWESO. It was shown at the 54th Cannes Film Festival in the Films Out of Competition category, and was Kiarostami’s first film outside his home country.
A second phase of UWESO was approved in August 2000 and the UWESO Development Programme is making a potent contribution to the overall advancement of Uganda, serving as a shining example for other African countries to emulate.
   More information from this link;
http://www.ifad.org/bsf/projects/uweso.htm

Pastor Lincoln

Uganda my great motherland

TO MOM DIANE, SHIRL AND ALL YOUR FRIENDS
HERE IS A BRIEF INTRODUCTION ABOUT UGANDA AND THEN THEN OUR PROPOSED PROJECT OR PROJECTS.

Uganda is my African home, my great motherland. She has been reffered to as the Pearl of Africa by the former British Premier Sir Winston Churchill. Uganda is a home of history in this meaning it has a rich cultural heritage. It is a home of farming and agriculture. It has a good climate and rich in natural resources.
I have created this Dairy to feature Forums, Debates and Articles concerning the social, economic and political life of Uganda. You are all welcome to Partipate.
Pastor Lincoln Joel Nsubuga

My proposed Final projects to Mom Diane,Shirl and Friends.
To Mom Diane and friends, I am so happy to have found the great community I had never heard about before, but through Mom Diane I have come to realise that meeting other people and sharing ideas with others can really help fulfill a pre-determined objective thus achieving the pre-determined goals.
Mom Diane and friends I want to share this final project proposals with you. I feel that I can carry out one or both of them with the help of the youth and women here because I have so far mobilised them and I have them at hand.
The two projects include;
Secretarial bureau with a salon/barber shop this employs both the services of the qualified and those who are not qualified.
The rent of the building ranges from 400,000/= a month which I believe we can make more than that money within a month itself.
For the equipments to use in the salon since there are so many in the developed world, you can send them directly to us.
These include; Photocopier machines can be 3, 5 computers can help us in the start, 2-scanners can help us in the start, 3-printers can help us also in the start. Then the salon equipments including the barber shop tools. Thats for the project above.
I do believe that when you come together as one you can help us get these things and start this project. I promise you that this project or projects will benefit many.

Secondly the project of poultry keeping this is attached with piggery keeping.
It involves the construction of the pigs houses which can be 2 of them for a start. We can start with 30 to 50 pigs, including a veterinary officer/doctor. The feeds for the pigs we can get them in the villages where by the depend mostly on plant materials etc. At the start this can be like a voluntary work and we get paid after getting the salaries and wages and also support other programmes like fees for the children, provide food and clothes etc.
The piggery keeping is attached to poultry keeping in both layers and broilers where by we shall need 200 broilers and 200 layers for a start.
With your help Mom Diane and your friends, we can fulfill this and brighten the lives of many in our community. I am therefore calling upon you to share ideas with others about this. Its me, the women and the children who are going to make Uganda an important place to live in and also a great motherland where by one day Mom Diane, Shirl and all other friends will come and enjoy the beauty of Uganda and also see for yourselves what the support you send has done.
God bless you all.
I love you all and I pray for you and your families.
May the Booman Tribune Community live forever.