Banbury Rotarian has raised a third of a million pounds for Sierra Leone projects

.

girls using the new well at Banbury International Community School
girls using the new well at Banbury International Community School

Nigel Yeadon, Banbury Rotary, 27th July 2022


Alan Wolstencroft, a member of Banbury Rotary Club since 2004, first went to Sierra Leone in 2005 as a volunteer member of a Rotary Mission Challenge team, with the Charity Mercy Ships, believing it would be a “one off life experience”. For Alan, the eleven days he spent in Freetown were life changing and he has now visited the country twelve times and is planning to return to Freetown in September.

On his second trip in 2006 he visited a school where the upper juniors were being taught under the trees, as they had run out of classroom space. Alan and members of his team donated some personal funds to enable the school to start to build a classroom, and once back in the UK Alan fundraised to enable the completion of the work. When he returned to the school on his third trip, in 2007, he made a pledge that he would work with the school community in order to build 6 additional classrooms, and this was the start of Alan’s Africa projects, which has since been adopted as an approved project of Banbury Rotary Club. 

Nigel Yeadon, newly elected President of Banbury Rotary Club said “although this is a Club approved project, which the Club supports, Alan is the driving force behind everything that has been achieved and truly Alan is the Champion of the Alan’s Africa project”.

Over the years Alan has fundraised to support eight different schools, and his work includes:

building and furnishing 39 classrooms - 21 of these with water harvesting systems, and 9 with electricity.

building 9 toilet blocks - 6 with water harvesting and handwash stations.

sunk 3 wells and fully refurbished another 3. 

supporting Momoh (above with Alan, in their football shirts), a wheelchair-bound teenager, for a number of years and in 2021, when he and his carer were evicted from their dwelling, he funded the building and furnishing a small home for them, on a piece of land gifted by their local community.

One of the schools he visited was housed in a small church hall but a new school has now been built within its own compound, comprising 6 classrooms, 2 toilet blocks and, a water well, with another 2 classrooms planned for later this year. In recognition of this, in 2016 the school chose to re-name itself the Banbury International Community School.

Additional projects include working with a network of supporters in the UK, providing school uniforms, sports kit, school stationery items, sanitary products for girls who would otherwise not attend school, setting up a small micro credit scheme, and involving Oxford United in supporting a local community football club. Support comes from individuals, businesses, sports clubs, schools, Rotary clubs, charitable trusts, WI’s, church groups and other organisations. 

He has undertaken 395 talks about his project work in Sierra Leone which have generated over £100,000.

Alan has just passed the THIRD OF A MILLION POUND mark and is continuing his work to “Make A Real Difference” to communities in Sierra Leone. He is currently working on a project to complete two classrooms to add to the two classrooms and a toilet block he has funded since the start of February this year. In the last Rotary year, he raised a total of £33,900 and in the first month of this Rotary year he has already generated £4,800 for the projects.

EVERY £ raised goes directly to the projects.

Kankalay School original mud block classrooms February 2022


Kankalay School 4 classrooms, office and staffroom July 2022


Mahera Wharf kids in the community


Mahera Wharf Oxford United under 17 team


back to page above this...

News from around the District

back stories from our Rotarians and clubs