An interesting story from The Standard, about a successful runner in Kenya who is investing in a school in a poverty stricken area in the Horn of Africa. Enjoy
~Moses~
By Stephen Makabila
From January, the first lot of 200 children drawn from four countries that have for decades suffered from cross-border cattle rustling raids would be enrolled in a ultra-modern school in Kapenguria, West-Pokot County. The multi-million school, built on a 20-acre farm, will comprise primary and secondary wings and will be known as Tegla Loroupe Peace and Leadership Centre.
The school is expected to bring together pupils from the warring communities in the greater Horn of Africa and offer them free education and intensive training on peace matters. Preferential admission will mainly be accorded to children from cattle-rustling areas in Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan and Ethiopia.
The brain behind the school is retired athlete and UN goodwill ambassador for Peace and Sports Tegla Loroupe, through her Tegla Loroupe Peace Foundation. She was, also, awarded honorary doctorate in Peace and Sports from the Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology.

Tegla Loroupe with guests who recently visisted the school, among them, KCAA Chairman Charles Wako (second right)
Sponsors
“The total cost of the schools, which will be semi-public, would be Sh300 million but we have completed the first phase at the cost of Sh48 million,” Loroupe told Education in an interview. Some of her sponsors include Prince Albert of Monaco, UNDP, the International Olympic Committee, International Amateur Association Federation, Oxfam-GB and Sameer Group.
“This is an integrative boarding school that will bring together students from warring communities to live together, learn together and basically foster unity among them. We shall offer them normal education, but with a great focus on Peace Studies which we have incorporated in the curriculum. Basically, this will be a Peace Building institution,” she explains.
She adds, “For the last 10 years, since I established the Tegla Loroupe Peace Foundation, we have been using sports as a unifying factor, through peace races, but we want to diversify our approach into education and other areas.” The Chief Executive Officer of the Foundation, Eunice Kaumbi says the school will have four components: vocational training, rescue centre for girls under threat of female genital mutilation, the academy section and a sports training facility.
“The first intake in January will be for Class One to Class Five, both boarding and day, and we expect pupils from communities that suffer from rustling such as Pokot, Marakwet and Turkana in Kenya, Karamojong (Uganda), Toposa (Sudan) and Dasanech (Ethiopia),” said Ms Kaumbi. “The school which is a semi-public institution will gradually grow to offer secondary education. We are finalising registration with the Ministry of Education on November 30, to enable Teachers Service Commission post teachers and a principal.”
She says more deserving students will be sponsored and more schools will be facilitated once the foundation receives enough support from well wishers. Besides matters of integration, the centre will also be used for tapping talent especially in athletics. The foundation intends to use it as a training camp for talented athletes from the region.
“This foundation believes in sports as one of the greatest factors of unity, and we shall use the centre to tap sports talent and train them in various fields. We shall do our best to ensure we create other sources of livelihood for our people so that they can stop fighting. This centre will help them develop their talents in sports,” says Kaumbi.
Opportunities
Loroupe says next year’s edition of the Peace Race would be held at the new institution. This year’s edition, held a few weeks back, was attended by Managing Director of the National Bank Reuben Marambii and the chairman of the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority Charles Wako, who called on members of the pastoral communities in Kenya, eastern Uganda and Southern Sudan to embrace education as a way of eradicating poverty and insecurity.
Kaumbi adds, “Through this initiative, we expect that educational opportunities will be widened within the Karamojang cluster, educational status will improve, enrolment will increase, drop out decreased significantly, retention rates increase, graduation from one level to the other will be enhanced and performance of pupils will be higher.”
The Tegla Loroupe Peace Foundation is a charitable organisation that focuses on restoring peace and fostering economic empowerment among pastoralists in North-Rift region and the greater Horn of Africa. It was established in 2003 by Loroupe, a Kenyan marathon legend who is also the foundation’s president, with an intention of championing for peaceful co-existence through sports and creating a difference in the lives of the less privileged.
The foundation focuses on rebuilding social relations and inducing trust among warring communities, showcase sports as an alternative economic livelihood, increase awareness on the girl-child rights, foster education, champion for peace and change the perception of pastoralists towards cattle raiding.
Peace building
“Personally, I got concerned about the ever increasing cases of cattle rustling incidents and ethnic clashes among pastoralists and I asked God to give me the courage and resources to facilitate peace building activities in this region,” recalls Loroupe.
Though the foundation’s peace efforts have yielded significant results, Loroupe describes the process of uniting warring communities as a daunting task that requires extreme patience, perseverance and persistence. She recalls that at the beginning, it was not easy to get the warring parties come together.
“One could easily give up because the more we talked about peace, the more things remained the same. Sometimes communities attacked each other soon after a peace-meeting. This was a great setback but we never gave up,” says Loroupe, who represented Kenya in many international races and became the first African woman to win the New York City marathon race in 1995.
Peace ambassadors
The foundation is credited with having been able to get many people out of cattle-rustling through sensitisation.
“Currently, 16 groups have been formed in the region to foster peaceful co-existence among the pastoralists and about 1,000 former warriors are under-going training as peace ambassadors, besides being empowered with livelihood skills and knowledge. We have further facilitated the formation of eight district Peace and Development Committees in Pokot, Marakwet and Turkana,” says Kaumbi.