School of St Jude


The School of St Jude is a charity-funded school located in the city of Arusha, in the northern Arusha Region of Tanzania.
The school, located across three campuses, provides free primary and secondary education to the poorest and brightest children of the Arusha Region. It also provides boarding for over 1000 students and employs over 270 local Tanzanian staff members.
It was founded by Australian Gemma Sisia in 2002, based on the belief that education is the best way to fight poverty.

History

The school was founded in 2002 by Australian Gemma Sisia, who dreamed of helping end poverty in Africa. She proved to be a talented fundraiser by engaging people and organisations such as Rotary. She named the school after St Jude; the patron saint of hopeless causes. 'My first donation was $10 and I had no building experience before moving to Africa, so the likelihood of the school actually getting off the ground was pretty hopeless! Anyway, I believed that with hard work, passion and prayer you can get through anything. I still believe that today.'
The school provides a free and high-quality education to over 1,800 girls and boys from the poorest families in the area. It is 100% charity funded and receives no government assistance from Tanzania or Australia. 90% of the school's funding is from regular Australian families who have signed up to sponsor a child or donate.
Each year the school opens its gates to select approx 150 new students who show academic promise combined with genuine and demonstrable financial need. These girls and boys are then given everything they need to be successful; from an international-standard education to safe accommodation and three nutritious meals a day.
In 2015 the school's first graduating class, Form 6, finished within the top 10% in Tanzania. Most of them completed a year of Community Service whilst applying for University, and in October 2016 were accepted into the top Universities in Tanzania. This includes 16 students who have now started studying a Doctor of Medicine or other health related degrees. This is one of the Tanzanian Government’s national priority subjects alongside Agriculture, Education, Tourism, Engineering and IT, all of which are being taken up as University degrees by The School of St Jude's 2015 graduating class.

Mission

The school's mission is to educate disadvantaged, bright students from the local Arusha district to become moral and intellectual leaders. Graduates from St Jude’s are expected to be respectful, responsible, honest and kind citizens, gainfully employed, capable of trustworthy leadership in their communities and at the national level.
The school's ultimate goal is to fight poverty through education and contribute to the improvement of teaching and learning across Tanzania.

Infrastructure

The school occupies three campuses. The primary campus, visitors centre and administrative office are located in the Moshono neighborhood of Arusha. Boarding for primary students from Class 5 and above is a 15-minute walk away in the Moivaro neighborhood. The secondary school campus, including its own boarding facilities and a 6-acre school farm, is located 20 minutes drive away from the primary campus in the town of Usa River.
St Jude's operates 27 school buses that ensure students safely reach the school from their homes. Two libraries house over thirty thousand books, CDs and DVDs. Students have access to science labs, sports fields, and computer and art rooms. All students eat hot lunches and a snack every day. The boarding students also receive breakfast and dinner. The school provides an estimated one million meals a year. The school employs over 270 East African staff and over 15 international volunteers from around the world.

Girls' education

Girls make up over half of the school's student body and this percentage was reached without the use of quotas. The school follows only two criteria in its recruitment: academic talent and a genuine financial need.
In Tanzania it is customary for school children, regardless of gender, to have their hair shaved or closely cropped. Looking at photos of the younger St Jude's students, it may be hard to tell their gender.
In 2013,Gemma Sisia explained her gender policy in a blog post on the school's website. Her view is that injecting quality in education systems, especially in Sub Saharan Africa, is an essential element missing from the girls' education debate.

Rotary Australia

Sisia knew she would have to pull off a major fund raising feat in order to obtain the money necessary to build the school of her dreams. It was her father who had the idea. On his advice, she contacted local Rotary clubs close to where her family lived. Gemma and a family friend, David Steller, worked the phones and in no time engaged members of local Rotary clubs in Australia, who, in turn, brought local schools on board.
They put up a table in a shopping mall where volunteers took turns selling $2 paper bricks representing the building works that needed financing. In a few months, they managed to raise the necessary funds. Thus began the long-term partnership between The School of St Jude and Rotary.
Gemma's inspiring story and her reputation as a passionate and engaging speaker led to many invitations to speak at Rotary Clubs. From then on, the number of people, Rotary clubs, schools, institutions, churches and businesses interested in supporting the cause snowballed. In 2000, when it was time to actually build the school, Armidale Central Rotary Club organized a group of 13 volunteers to travel to Tanzania and build the first block of classrooms. This was the first of many volunteer teams of Rotarians to get personally involved with the school. Rotarians who remained in Australia helped with the collection and transportation of computers, library and school books, teaching aids, classroom equipment, sports equipment, sewing machines, clothes and an endless list of goods. Many Rotarians visit the school each year.
In 2016, senior St Jude's students founded youth Rotary branches of their own.

US Support and Charitable Status

The secondary campus is named after the American Smith family, of the Gordon V. and Helen C. Smith Foundation, based in the Washington, D.C. area of the United States. Their connection to St Jude's came about after the family traveled together to Tanzania for a safari in 2004 and the tour guide took them to visit a local public school. The Smiths have a long history of supporting educational initiatives. After seeing classes with up to 120 students and few resources, they became determined to support a nonprofit initiative providing educational opportunities in Tanzania. A couple of months later, family members returned to Arusha, visited a number of schools and decided to get involved with St Jude's. Their donation and personal involvement made it possible for St Jude's to extend its educational offering to secondary school level.
In September 2016 the school announced that the American Friends of the School of St Jude, Tanzania, Inc. launched a new website; https://www.afstjude.org/ St Jude’s US fundraising efforts are officially recognized as a 501 public charity and the American Friends organization has been granted official tax-exempt status EIN 47-3077055. This allows US supporters to give to St Jude’s with easy, tax-deductible contributions and the reassurance that any financial donations are tax-deductible to the full extent of the law.

Visitors and word of mouth

As part of its fundraising and marketing activities, the school receives hundred of visitors each year for day tours of the school grounds. Sponsors of students are encouraged to visit and can participate in a home visit with their family. Up to 60 visitors can stay in quality hotel style accommodation that includes an en suite bathroom, mosquito net and the use of a visitors kitchen with full cooking and catering facilities. A visitors team is on hand daily and can organise a program of activities if needed.
Visitors are an important part of the school’s campaign to encourage visitors, sponsors and donors to support the school by word of mouth communication. The school also offers special two- or three-week tours including safaris in the Serengeti and Ngorongoro Crater national parks, excursions to see local tribes and trips to Zanzibar.

Gemma Sisia

Gemma Sisia was born on November 3, 1971. She spent her early years on a wool sheep property just outside Guyra in Northern New South Wales, Australia. As the only daughter among the eight children of Sue and Basil Rice, Gemma had to keep up with her brothers when it came to mustering sheep and riding horses. Gemma's mother, Sue, believes this where her Gemma's determined spirit came from; '"I don't think you could ever talk Gemma into or out of anything." Sue Rice still lives on the family property in Guyra and a number of her brothers still live in the area. Basil, Gemma's father, passed away in 2004.
After completing secondary studies at St Vincent's College in Sydney, Gemma decided to pursue a Bachelor of Science at University. She majored in Genetics and Biochemistry at Melbourne University and the University of Northern Territory where she was awarded First Class degree. Gemma concluded her tertiary studies with a Diploma of Education through the University of New England in Armidale.
At 22 years old with a passion and zeal inherited from her ancestor, Edmund Rice, Gemma devoted some time to helping the poor in Africa. She traveled to Uganda, East Africa, to work for three years as a volunteer teacher. This experience led to a fervent belief that a free, high-quality education should be the right of all children in the world, and that education is the strongest weapon in the fight against poverty, corruption and political instability.
Upon returning to Australia, Gemma began fundraising to help underprivileged children in Uganda complete their schooling. Overwhelmed with support and donations, Gemma raised a significant amount of money, enough so that she started an official fund to invest in the education of East Africa's poorest children. After realising that the funds were not being distributed properly, she returned to East Africa to manage the money herself.
While working in Uganda Gemma went on a holiday to neighboring Tanzania. It was on safari that she met and fell in love with Richard Sisia, her safari driver, who would later become her husband. In 1998 Daniel Sisia, Richard's father and Gemma's father in law, gifted her a small plot of land in Arusha to build a school for the poor. Gemma started building The School of St Jude on this land with a mission to help the poorest children receive an education. The school opened in 2002 with three sponsored students and has consistently grown
In 2000, Gemma was awarded a Sapphire Paul Harris Fellow by Rotary International. Gemma's autobiography, St Jude's, was published by Pan Macmillan Australia in 2007 and remained on the Best Sellers List for over two months. Also in 2007, Gemma's achievements were honored by an Order of Australia medal. Gemma's story has been featured twice in the ABC television documentary program Australian Story, in 2005 and a follow-up in 2009. In 2012, Gemma was named one of The Australian Financial Review and Westpac's 100 Women of Influence, nominated in the Global category. She was also a finalist in New South Wales for Australian of the Year.

Timeline

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