Regenerative Farming
Limit soil disturbance to protect structure and reduce erosion, maintain soil cover to retain moisture and suppress weeds, rotate crops to prevent pests and enhance fertility, and diversify crops to boost resilience and balance ecosystems for sustainable farming.
Green Regeneration
Empower farmers to use vegetative propagation, grow trees from stumps and roots, construct bunds to hold rainwater, enabling seed germination, prevent erosion, and plant trees, transforming weather conditions, brittle soils, barren soils, and runoff areas into productive farmlands, reducing fragile family farming.
Waste-to-gas
To transform waste into biogas for cooking, heating, and lighting, to engage pastoralist communities, to promote low-cost clean energy, to enhance health among women and girls, to reduce forest destruction, and to improve livelihoods and weather conditions in pastoralist areas.
End Obstetric Fistula
Obstetric Fistula Advocancy
End obstetric fistula, a devastating birth injury, improving maternal health. Provide treatment funding, ensuring access to life-saving care. Advocate for awareness, reducing stigma. Reintegrate survivors, fostering community support. Reduce depression and isolation, enhancing mental well-being. Empower women, leading healthier lives.
Zero Malaria Drive
Malaria Prevention
Our approach combines two key pillars: larvae elimination and vector prevention. We spot, map, and remove mosquito breeding sites to stop population growth. We also prevent mosquitoes from contacting people, especially those that escaped larvae elimination, reducing malaria transmission.
Building Schools
We build schools in communities where none exist or where classrooms are missing and learning happens under trees. We also construct toilets where none exist, to prevent open defecation and worms contaminating community land and water. Our goal is to provide safe learning spaces, improve education access, and prevent the spread of diseases, worms and pollution.
Pathway Centre
We train youths and young women in entrepreneurship, empowering them to create businesses and generate income. We teach ICT skills, enabling them to access technology and increase employability. We provide job skills training, improving their chances of securing stable and digital employment.
Support Child
Support a child to make a difference in their life and their family in Africa. Your donation will help provide education, meet basic needs, and create a brighter future, while also contributing to the development and well-being of the community.
Their response was poignant: “In our villages, there is no water, no resources, no food.” Women and children traveled long distances to fetch water, and people in drylands struggled for every meal. The critical realization emerged—water was the key. Determined to make a difference, Jonathan initiated a multifaceted approach.
Starting with building water access in villages, he extended efforts to farming projects for food security, fostering prosperity. The next steps involved enhancing education and health to empower these marginalized communities. Through these initiatives, rural areas, drylands, and slums could break free from a century-long cycle of devastation and abandonment. Jonathan’s journey illuminated a path towards transformation, driven by the fundamental belief that water could be the catalyst for positive change.
In 2018 during a pivotal journey to Makueni County, Kenya, Jonathan Munyany encountered a stark reality. While touring the vast and flourishing properties of a wealthy businessman seeking help exporting meat to the Middle East, Jonathan observed a profound contrast. Amidst the prosperity of ranches, he couldn’t ignore the persistent poverty and destitution in the villages.
The absence of young adults, the vital force for community development, struck Jonathan deeply. Inquiring about their whereabouts, he discovered that many had left for towns and cities in search of jobs and reliable access to food and water. However, these urban areas offered little in terms of quality living conditions, with workers from villages residing in makeshift slums
Jonathan’s exploration revealed young men in the villages grappling with substance abuse and limited hope for the future. Disturbingly, some planned to marry young girls due to the scarcity of women their age. Motivated by these dire conditions, Jonathan delved into the issue further, visiting Nairobi to understand why young people felt compelled to leave their homes.