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by
Brooke Bunch
The third benefit dinner and
raffle for the Kenyan Children’s Fund will take place 6 p.m.
Wednesday, April 13, in 199 Irvine Hall. The Kenyan Children’s
Fund is a group of students and faculty organizations dedicated
to supporting children orphaned by the HIV/AIDS epidemic in
Kenya.
The funds raised at the benefit
dinner — as well as through the sale of green rubber-band
bracelets with the slogan, “One Band, One Love, One Chance” —
will be used to purchase school books for 600 orphaned children,
according to Gillian Ice, Ph.D., M.P.H., assistant
professor of social medicine.
“Students are required to
purchase textbooks to go to school,” Ice says. “The books
generally cost between $5 and $25. These orphans have few family
members left to support them and those family members that they
do have — generally grandparents — have very few resources, most
make less than $12 a month.”
Proceeds will also go toward
the purchase of school uniforms for roughly 150 children who
were recently orphaned.
“Rather than just handing the
money over to someone else, we will purchase the uniforms and
books and deliver them ourselves,” Ice says. “I take the money
and purchase the items and individually hand them to the
children.”
The dinner will feature a
video, produced by Ohio University’s Global Learning Community
students, which highlights interviews with Ice and OU-COM
medical students on the importance of the Kenyan Children’s
Fund. A dance will be performed by Sankofa.
A raffle will top off the
evening, complete with donations from 23 area businesses, as
well as Music City in Nashville and the Sheraton Centre Toronto
Hotel, and prizes ranging from pizza to weekend stays at various
hotels. Raffle prizes are provided by local businesses.
Last year the benefit dinner
raised nearly $4,000, allowing the purchase of 450 school
uniforms for orphans in the western Kenyan area. Ice says they
are aiming to raise $6,000 to purchase textbooks for 600
children and school uniforms for 100 children who did not
receive the uniforms last year.
“Uniforms are required for
attendance,” Ice says. “Last year, many students were able to
re-enroll in school after we provided them with uniforms.”
Suggested donations for the
dinner are $5 for students and $10 for faculty, staff and
community members. Tickets for the dinner and the raffle can be
purchased in advance by contacting Ice at (740) 593-2128, or
from Cheri McFee, 304 Grosvenor Hall. The “One Love”
bracelets can be purchased in campus dining halls at $2 each, or
three for $5.
Kenya is one of the nine
countries most affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic, according to
the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS and World Health
Organization (UNAIDS/WHO). A report by UNAIDS/WHO in 2000
estimated there were 2.1 million Kenyans infected and that more
than one-half million children had been orphaned as a result of
deaths from AIDS.
The dinner and raffle are
cosponsored by the fund, National Osteopathic Women Physicians
Association, Student Osteopathic Medical Association,
International Medicine Club, Department of Social Medicine,
Pediatrics Club and the Institute for the African Child.
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