From Humble Beginnings
In December, 2006, Maree came to Livingstone on an exploratory trip and found herself in Ngwenya township, visiting a small informal play group for pre-schoolers that was meeting under a thatched shelter. She spotted an opportunity to help the community by improving educational opportunities for youngsters, many of whom were not attending school due to a combination of economic hardship and a lack of access to educational facilities.
Maree returned to Livingstone in August, 2007 with a group of high school students from KLAS, a Japanese high school based in Switzerland, on the first KLAS Zambia Humanitarian Trip. The students had raised money at their school to donate to the development of the pre-school. Over the next few years, Maree brought students every March, helping with funds, energy, and educational planning to build up the school.
In 2008, Ngwenya town development council allocated a parcel of land to build a more permanent school building. In 2009 construction of the first new building was started, with two classrooms and an office for the teachers. In 2010 the KLAS students painted the new building and donated school supplies, while raising money for further expansion of the school, In 2011, a new cookhouse was built, with a second room that has since been converted into another classroom. The 2012 team raised money to buy an adjacent plot of land to expand the school, which was now offering grade one classes, in addition to two years of pre-school. The 2014 team raised funds for, and helped build, a chicken house to help Olive Tree plug holes in its funding by starting its first income-generating activity (IGA), raising chicks to adult chickens and selling them at a profit. In 2016, an exceptional year of fund-raising by KLAS students saw sufficient money raised to build a new classroom building, with three rooms, two earmarked for future expansion of the school up to grades three and four, and one for other IGA activities. In 2019-20, two plots of land adjacent to the school were purchased to allow for future expansion of the school. In 2021 two new classrooms were constructed to allow expansion of the school up to grade 8, pending approval from the Ministry of Education.
Ngwenya Community