Container Peter 1996 heading to Zambia

Container Peter 1996 heading to Zambia

Container Peter 1996 heading to Zambia

Container Peter 1996 heading to Zambia

Container Peter 1996 heading to Zambia

Penny inside container

 Container Peter 1996 heading to Zambia

Penny felt privileged when she was told that Workaid wanted to name a container in her honour. As a Workaid volunteer for nine years, Penny made a significant contribution deserving of recognition. She chose to name the container after her younger son, Peter, and the month they spent in Uganda together in 1996.

Penny speaks fondly of her son and his friend Zanna. Zanna’s grandparents were supporting a very poor island community in Kibale National Park in Uganda, which prompted Peter and Zanna to make their own contribution. In 1995 Peter and Zanna flew out to Uganda. They purchased a Jeep and drove west to a poverty-stricken but beautiful part of Uganda where they found an island surrounded by the deepest crater lake in Africa also known as Lake Bunyonyi.

They were there for a year to provide some teaching support and to try and connect the school with their school in Oxford. They soon realized how poor the children were, when they noticed they owned no shoes. One of the locals informed them that the first thing a child had to learn was how to build their own dugout canoe in order to get to the mainland. Additionally, part of the children’s school curriculum was to make bricks in order to build their own classrooms.

Peter in 1996 in Uganda
Peter, Zanna and friends in their Jeep
Peter and friends in their Jeep

The following year, Peter invited Penny and her husband, Michael, to go camping on an adjoining island for Christmas: “it was the most memorable, amazing month and we met so many wonderful people”. They visited the island again in 1999 and saw some incredible classrooms built by local children. In 2008, they invited some friends to join them for another visit to Uganda. Michael passed away in Entebbe, Uganda in 2013.

Penny herself trained as an Occupational Therapist which led to working with people with mental health problems. When she turned 60, she had to retire from full-time work, running a department, but continued to work part-time until she was 70. When Penny finally retired, she decided to dedicate herself to Workaid because of the great things Peter and Zanna had achieved and from her own experiences in Uganda. Volunteering at Workaid was a pleasant experience filled with friendly people.

Now, Penny looks forward to attending special events at Workaid where she can reunite with people she used to work with and take a trip down memory lane. Penny wishes Workaid a long and successful continued journey, sending tools to African countries.

Container Peter 1996 has left for Zambia filled with over 800 boxes of tools and kits.

Peter, Zanna and Penny in Uganda
Peter, Zanna and Penny in Uganda
Container Peter 1996 leaving in the snow.
Container Peter 1996 leaving in the snow on 19th November