The Kibera Cultural Project
Posted on Aug 17th, 2007
by
Jordan
Proposal and Outline for Kibera Cultural Project Nairoi, Kenya:
Kibera is the largest slum in Africa, located on the outskirts of Nairobi, Kenya and home to close to one million people, most of whom live on less than $1 a day. It is one of the most densely populated urban settlements in the world.
What follows are details of a planned community center, written primarily for those who have visited. The plan will no doubt go through many transformations as we begin to work on making it a reality.
...
The Go-Go Boys have a large plot of land behind their office that they have been given permission to build a "hall" on. Their local councilor is behind the project and has arranged for trucks working on improving the road to bring six trucks of fill to help level the area.
The idea is for this hall to be a workshop and cultural space that would support and facilitate programs by many groups and organizations throughout Kibera. Classes would be offered in martial arts and self-defense, HIV and AIDS awareness, creative arts such as painting, dance, theater, puppetry, music, and vocational skills such as wood carving, screen printing, sewing, dyeing etc.
The planning, building and operation of the center would be documented through a collaboration with Global Relations which run an editing studio and creative house right outside Kibera, in Adam's Arcade, teaching video classes and producing documentaries about the area.
Program Coordinator:
A Coordinator would be the ground person for the project, overseeing the scheduling of the center's activities, supervising its daily activities and facilitating on-going relationships with a large variety of groups, organizations, agencies and individuals. The Program Coordinator would organize the regular documenting of the programs taking place at the cultural center and welcome visitors who would visit the center to learn more, collaborate and contribute. This would be a salaried position that would report directly to the project's funders.
The Program Coordinator would have a small office built in the hall that could have a computer with internet access, printer, scanner and digital camera. These tools would aid in the planning, promoting, managing and documenting of the activities at the center. As with everything, there would have to be strict guidelines created and implemented for their use.
Construction of the Building:
It would be ideal to have a collaborative project happen out of the construction of the center itself. Both in the planning and engineering of the building (Messiah's engineering abroad program for example) and in the actual construction and decorating. Labor is not much of a factor, as the boys would supply most of that, but having the raising of the building being a collaborative affair would do much to set the tone for the future of the Center.
The building could be approximately 20' x 30' or even longer. With an office, bathrooms, etc. Depending on the decided upon scope there could be one large room with one or more smaller rooms.
Donors could receive their name somewhere on the building and a mural project could transform both the inside and outside into a vibrant, beautiful beacon of color and positivity for the area.
...
Medium and Long Term Plans
Cultural Exhibition Space:
The Kibera New Market boys group that Fauz and Anthony are a part of an upcoming meeting with their MP and the councilor who is supporting the group, to discuss being given a piece of that property to build an office and a storage pin. Their idea is to make an income through renting storage space for the for the market stalls to rent overnight space in.
This office could eventually be attached to a circle theater. This theater would provide the creative exhibition space for the performances that are rehearsed at the Kibera Cultural Project. It would also be available for any and other cultural activities coming out of Kibera to be exhibited and performed. One possibility would be for the theater to be a simple, flat concrete circle in the ground, with a removable tent over all or part of it for cover. The New Market boys group would provide the security and maintenance for the theater space, with grassroots cultural activities being lent the space for free and private events (weddings, church revivals, etc.) being able to rent the space for a reasonable fee.
The Products:
A "branding" of the fair trade products that are produced within the Kibera Cultural Projects' workshops and associated groups would result in uncovering new markets for these products to be sold, both supporting the groups and also telling their story to the wider world. Working together, many locally made products could be value-added with accomanying materials that tell about who made them, how they are organized and how the purchase of the product will benefit the individual or group. These include wooden toys, clothing, crafts, artwork, etc.
A Kibera Cultural Center market stall could go out to each of the area markets, selling the items that were made by the groups within Kibera and telling the story of their manufacture and collaboration through vibrant pictures and art on the stalls backdrop as well as tags on the individual pieces. The people operating the stall and all of the producers would get a fair price for what they made without going through a middle man, all proceeds could go into the micro-lending fund, and the widely told story about the slums would be challenged and a new narrative would be created around models of development and success.
Micro-Financing:
The Kibera Cultural Project could easily become the disbursement point for micro-financing. These small loans would be given to groups and individuals whose proposal was accepted with the understanding that they pay back the loan with a very small percent of interest that will help to fund other loans for other groups. The idea of "matching funds" that a group has already raised toward a concrete goal could be explored. There are many organizations that are working in this field. The Kibera Cultural Project could be a partner one or multiple of these organizations.
Kibera is the largest slum in Africa, located on the outskirts of Nairobi, Kenya and home to close to one million people, most of whom live on less than $1 a day. It is one of the most densely populated urban settlements in the world.
What follows are details of a planned community center, written primarily for those who have visited. The plan will no doubt go through many transformations as we begin to work on making it a reality.
...
The Go-Go Boys have a large plot of land behind their office that they have been given permission to build a "hall" on. Their local councilor is behind the project and has arranged for trucks working on improving the road to bring six trucks of fill to help level the area.
Empty Lot Behind Go-Go Boys
The idea is for this hall to be a workshop and cultural space that would support and facilitate programs by many groups and organizations throughout Kibera. Classes would be offered in martial arts and self-defense, HIV and AIDS awareness, creative arts such as painting, dance, theater, puppetry, music, and vocational skills such as wood carving, screen printing, sewing, dyeing etc.
The planning, building and operation of the center would be documented through a collaboration with Global Relations which run an editing studio and creative house right outside Kibera, in Adam's Arcade, teaching video classes and producing documentaries about the area.
Program Coordinator:
A Coordinator would be the ground person for the project, overseeing the scheduling of the center's activities, supervising its daily activities and facilitating on-going relationships with a large variety of groups, organizations, agencies and individuals. The Program Coordinator would organize the regular documenting of the programs taking place at the cultural center and welcome visitors who would visit the center to learn more, collaborate and contribute. This would be a salaried position that would report directly to the project's funders.
The Program Coordinator would have a small office built in the hall that could have a computer with internet access, printer, scanner and digital camera. These tools would aid in the planning, promoting, managing and documenting of the activities at the center. As with everything, there would have to be strict guidelines created and implemented for their use.
Construction of the Building:
It would be ideal to have a collaborative project happen out of the construction of the center itself. Both in the planning and engineering of the building (Messiah's engineering abroad program for example) and in the actual construction and decorating. Labor is not much of a factor, as the boys would supply most of that, but having the raising of the building being a collaborative affair would do much to set the tone for the future of the Center.
The building could be approximately 20' x 30' or even longer. With an office, bathrooms, etc. Depending on the decided upon scope there could be one large room with one or more smaller rooms.
Donors could receive their name somewhere on the building and a mural project could transform both the inside and outside into a vibrant, beautiful beacon of color and positivity for the area.
...
Medium and Long Term Plans
Cultural Exhibition Space:
The Kibera New Market boys group that Fauz and Anthony are a part of an upcoming meeting with their MP and the councilor who is supporting the group, to discuss being given a piece of that property to build an office and a storage pin. Their idea is to make an income through renting storage space for the for the market stalls to rent overnight space in.
This office could eventually be attached to a circle theater. This theater would provide the creative exhibition space for the performances that are rehearsed at the Kibera Cultural Project. It would also be available for any and other cultural activities coming out of Kibera to be exhibited and performed. One possibility would be for the theater to be a simple, flat concrete circle in the ground, with a removable tent over all or part of it for cover. The New Market boys group would provide the security and maintenance for the theater space, with grassroots cultural activities being lent the space for free and private events (weddings, church revivals, etc.) being able to rent the space for a reasonable fee.
The Products:
A "branding" of the fair trade products that are produced within the Kibera Cultural Projects' workshops and associated groups would result in uncovering new markets for these products to be sold, both supporting the groups and also telling their story to the wider world. Working together, many locally made products could be value-added with accomanying materials that tell about who made them, how they are organized and how the purchase of the product will benefit the individual or group. These include wooden toys, clothing, crafts, artwork, etc.
A Kibera Cultural Center market stall could go out to each of the area markets, selling the items that were made by the groups within Kibera and telling the story of their manufacture and collaboration through vibrant pictures and art on the stalls backdrop as well as tags on the individual pieces. The people operating the stall and all of the producers would get a fair price for what they made without going through a middle man, all proceeds could go into the micro-lending fund, and the widely told story about the slums would be challenged and a new narrative would be created around models of development and success.
Micro-Financing:
The Kibera Cultural Project could easily become the disbursement point for micro-financing. These small loans would be given to groups and individuals whose proposal was accepted with the understanding that they pay back the loan with a very small percent of interest that will help to fund other loans for other groups. The idea of "matching funds" that a group has already raised toward a concrete goal could be explored. There are many organizations that are working in this field. The Kibera Cultural Project could be a partner one or multiple of these organizations.

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