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Summary Week One

During this week you shall also interact directly with tribal elders from various Kenyan communities. Here you learn of the cultures, traditions and beliefs of these people. From the songs and dances to the rituals and medicines, tribal ways and customs will enchant your very self. By the time the week is over you shall have gained an experience, learning and the spirit of teamwork. All this will be needed in the next week. Read More for details....

Week One
Week Two
Week Three
Whole Trip

barebottom Maasai guys


 

Shields of the Maasai
 

Summary Week 2

The second week is one of work. You will arrive in the school community that will gain from your coming.
The first day will be spend getting accustomed to the host family that will cater for your needs during the stay. You will eat, drink, sleep and live in the same way, as the host family will do. This will enable each participant be in direct contact with the locals while at the same time practice the ways that you learnt during the first week. The next days of the week will be fully spent in work.
You and the rest of the team will be divided into small groups and assigned tasks that will involve renovation and construction of the identified school. The days will be busy as we mix, paste, build and construct the buildings and furniture in the school.
Some ours in the day will be spent visiting local attractions and also participating in the local activities such as the weekly livestock market.
By the end of this week, you will have made lifelong friendships with the families and communities that you shall have interacted with. You will also have had a chance to change the life of many children through the school.
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Summary Week 3

Clear white beaches, warm ocean waters and the unique 'Swahili' culture, these are but some of the attractive sites and cultural beauties of this coastal area.
Famous for Malindi ( an area famous for world renown resorts and hotels of unimaginable beauty and romantic settings) and Lamu Island (a uniquely set Island where the common mode of transport is the donkey/ass and has remained cultural and traditional through the many years since the integration of cultures between the original Bantu speaking tribes in the coast and the Arabs who came in the mid eighteenth and late nineteenth centuries as traders from the Arab lands of the middle East) , the coastal stretch of the Kenyan coast has more than fun to offer.
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