After the end of Sierra Leone’s extended civil war, a group of people who wanted to help the country rebuild decided to provide educational opportunities for children in their own communities. They raised funds to build simple school buildings and to pay teachers’ salaries. As the schools became established, our partners realised that students and their families also needed basic health education and medical services, and later employment opportunities for those in remote areas. This led them to start a clinic, with a travelling health clinic team, and establish village bakeries.
They are planning to build and equip dormitories for senior secondary school students, open a micro-finance office, and provide simple poverty relief supplies such as shoes and clothing.
This shipment will include items ranging from mattresses and kitchen supplies for dormitories to office furniture, computers, and clothing.
Benjamin’s story

When our partners opened a primary school in Benjamin’s district, he became the first person in his family ever to attend school. Despite a 6 km walk between school and his family’s farming plot, he excelled at his studies. Benjamin not only finished primary school but also secondary school and then graduated from university with a teaching degree. As a teacher, he enjoys being an example and a source of encouragement for children who come from similar backgrounds.
Esther’s story

When Esther’s family moved to a small village, she was afraid that her schooling would come to an end. She was delighted to discover our partners’ secondary school there with “diligent and knowledgeable” staff.
When a nurse visited the school to give lessons on health and hygiene, Esther immediately knew that she too wanted to become a health professional. She is now in her second year, studying nursing at university.
This modest, 5-room school is built and staffed by our partners. It is the only secondary school in this district of northern Sierra Leone.
This shipment will include stationery, books, furniture and other school supplies to provide educational opportunities for many others like Esther and Benjamin.
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Grace was violently attacked and left for dead after armed men broke into her home and she did not have the money they demanded. This left her unable to care for herself or her children. Our partners provided her with intensive counselling as well as medical help, a safe space for her family, new skills training, and a microloan to assist her in starting her own business. She has now moved from home-cooking and selling bean paste to opening her own village shop. She has also rented a home and is able to feed and send her children to school.
Refrigerators from Crossroads’ previous shipment were distributed among regional hospitals and are being used to store vaccines and medicines. Within a year, this provision allowed vaccination against, and effective treatment of, tropical diseases and other infections for more than 30,000 people. Staff expressed great relief that they no longer needed to worry that medications had degraded because of unsuitable storage conditions.




