Ugandan project doesn’t stop at literacy
2 November 2008NEBBI DISTRICT, West Nile Region, Uganda — Being literate means being able to read useful information – that's why the first unit in the UPLIFT literacy program tells how to treat malaria.
Later units deal with farming methods, nutrition, hygiene and safety, making compost, environmental challenges, and so on.
"When I compare my condition and that of my friends who have not attended UPLIFT courses, I can see a big difference," says villager Alisa Poli, speaking in Alur, the main language in this part of Uganda.
Earlier this year – at the age of 63 – she began the UPLIFT program and already can read.
The “T” in UPLIFT stands for transformation, a concept at the heart of the program, says program director Hizzaya Hissani. The full name of the initiative is the Uganda Program of Literacy for Transformation.
The Nebbi District, far from the capital of Kampala, is one of the poorest areas in Uganda.
A villager named Arombo Libati, who has just learned to write, sends a note of greeting to the teacher. The original letter is in the Alur language. Part of the… »
Mrs. Poli says she not only learned to read through UPLIFT but also adopted new practices at home, including building a pit latrine and an animal shelter.
Hassan Ringtho, chairperson of the local government in Paidha subcounty, said UPLIFT has been particularly effective in educating older people and changing… »
Kulastika Okwong, 61, says UPLIFT has changed the way she looks at health care: “I used to go to witch doctors when someone was sick, but now I try medicine… »
Onegiun Oreste, 56, who is Catholic, is a volunteer mentor for UPLIFT. He says people have learned attitudes and techniques that promote development, and that the… »
UPLIFT is active in 11 of the 19 subcounties that form the Nebbi District in the West Nile region of Uganda.
More than 6,700 people have completed the UPLIFT training course, and another 4,000 will finish by the end of next year.
“UPLIFT uses literacy as a vehicle for social and economic transformation,” explains Dr. Hissani, who with five fellow Baha’is began the program in 2001.
Since that time, more than 6,700 local residents have completed the literacy training, and – with new support from the Norwegian and Ugandan governments – UPLIFT has committed to training 4,000 more people by the end of 2009.
What participants learn
Those who have been through the course – UPLIFT uses the term “learners” – tend to talk about its holistic nature rather than the isolated skill of reading.
“My attitude about things has changed a lot,” says Kulastika Okwong, a 61-year-old mother of seven who has completed the UPLIFT training. “I was really ignorant. I didn’t know how to treat malaria, and I didn’t know how to make compost…. We lived day-to-day. We ate all the food I produced, and we had no savings.”
Mrs. Okwong, whose husband is one of 10 field coordinators for UPLIFT, says she used to feel like a “dependent” person; since going through the training she feels more independent.
“I used to go to witch doctors when someone was sick, but now I try medicine made of neem leaves. If that doesn’t work, we go to the health center,” she says. “I used to think that school meetings were a waste of time, but now I see they are important. Reading books is important, too.”

