Orkeeswa Impact – 2024

Orkeeswa Secondary School, in a rural-remote Maasai area of Tanzania, opened with around 40 students in April 2009. I was Orkeeswa’s only non-teaching volunteer in the first year. Orkeeswa today has around 400 students at an increasingly beautiful and well-resourced campus.

In September 2024, I returned to Tanzania to witness Orkeeswa’s growth and impact.

Here’s what stood out:

  • Locally staffed – no more western volunteers.
  • Teacher and support staff qualifications are world class with evident passion for their posting.
  • Alumni returning to their community with relevant qualifications and experience.
  • Permaculture and paving replacing mud and dust.
  • School garden now producing enough fruit & veg to feed the whole school in the wet season.
  • Integrated life skills – small groups of students were deep in discussion daily in gardens, pavillions and classrooms.
  • Orkeeswa Outreach – student and alumni volunteers teach life skills, academic and sporting curriculum in 9 local government primary schools supported by paid counsellors.
  • Orkeeswa Incubator – supporting students to achieve their post-secondary goals. I met with student Bariki, whose Maasai family traditionally keep bees. Bariki makes his own hives, uses a pushbike to transport them 20km, and was selling raw honey on a small scale in cut-off salvaged water bottles. Orkeeswa helped Bariki with surgery to correct impaired mobility, and the Incubator program is supporting him to develop viable boutique honey production.
  • WAEV (Women’s Agri-Enviro Vision) founded by Saing’orie Sangau from Orkeeswa’s first year in 2009. Along with women’s economic empowerment and literacy, WAEV is proving women, villages and schools can establish trees (nearly 150,000 planted) and food crops for shade, regeneration of severe erosion, improved soil nutrition and food security.
  • Deputy Head of School, Hosea, was also from the first class in 2009.

Orkeeswa location in context with an insert of the campus – thanks to Google maps.

Sharing new skills

Orkeeswa School in rural Tanzania encourages students to be curious, to learn new skills and to share new skills with others.

Form 4 (year 10) students Naini and Nang’idai learned how to play the trumpet from one of their teachers, then shared their skills with other students and members of their community church. When their teacher left, Naini and Nang’idai took over the running of the school trumpet club. They taught pre-form one students, and helped them to improve their English at the same time. Naini and Nang’idai are developing skills in leadership and teaching through running the club. Naini said that through teaching music, she has connected with many students and improved her relationships with them. Nang’idai has helped her church group to write a Maasai song using the skills she has passed on.

See more youth-produced and inspired stories at Orkeeswa Story Lab