The Kenya Project History
As her son translated
for her, Mrs. Robi spoke to her unsuspecting audience with warmth
and introduced herself, “My name is Isabella Robi and I love God.”
What a simple statement, yet so powerful in its meaning. She
continued on, “God saved me and He called me to this ministry. God
has given me a love for children.” In her native land of Kenya, Mrs.
Robi was heartbroken that the children in her small village just
outside of Nakuru, Kenya, were not attending school. Visiting their
homes, she told their parents that they would go to school. The
burden of the responsibility weighed heavy upon her heart and she
knew she would die if she walked away from it.
Mrs. Robi planted the
seed, financial supporters from the U.S. watered and God provided
the increase! Seven years have passed and there are now over 460
children in the school and 17 teachers. Most of these children have
lost their parents and are fully dependent on the love of Mrs. Robi,
her husband, Jeremiah and student sponsors from the U.S. for the
opportunity to go to school. In January 2005, a new school building
with eight classrooms, a library and administrative area was opened.
Named for the primary church supporter, Mountain Park Academy had a
new home. Since the beginning, Mrs. Robi has gone to the school
everyday and should she miss, the children run up the hill to her
house and look for “Grandma Robi.”
In 1998, when “Mama
Robi” saw the children wandering without supervision in her village,
she could not bear the thought that they would never go to school.
She, herself, had been denied continuing her education past the
third grade. “I did not have a happy heart to see all of the other
children in school,” says Mrs. Robi. “I was the fourth born, second
girl from a family of 11 girls and 10 boys. My father had 3 wives
and they were not able to educate all of us.” During the Freedom
Wars, Isabella’s family was divided and sent to three different
villages. She grew up near Nyeri close to Mt. Kenya. During this
time, most of the young girls became pregnant. “Of the eleven girls
in my family, I was the only one without a child before marriage and
I saw their many struggles with their children. I was separated from
the other girls and felt very alone. It was my prayer to not be
pregnant before marriage and God honored my prayer,” recounts Mrs.
Robi.
As a young woman,
Isabella met Jeremiah Robi from the town of Nakuru. She wondered how
it came to be that he would want to marry her, but God planned it.
“My father loved me very much and when my father learned of the
proposal of marriage, he did not approve,” she remembers. However,
Jeremiah and Isabella would not be deterred. In those days, travel
in Kenya required a government pass. Jeremiah sent a pass and two
men to come for Isabella in the night. She told her family that she
was staying over at a lady’s house, but by 11:00 p.m. she was gone
and traveled over 120 miles to Nakuru by car the next morning.
Settling in the town of Nakuru, the Robi’s began their family.
So there she was,
years later, her husband retired, her own eight children grown,
watching the village children wander aimlessly in the streets. She
gathered the children and told them, “You will go to school.” She
visited their parents, those who had them, and began teaching the
children in wooden buildings that had been used as saw mills at the
bottom of her property. That was in 1998, and only the beginning of
the dream. Like many great dreams, sometimes there are set-backs
before the dream is fully realized. Such was the case with Mrs. Robi
and “her” children. After the first term, many of the children did
not return and neither did the teachers. “I told the Lord that if he
wanted me to do something, He would have to change things because I
was done with it,” says Mrs. Robi. And change things, He did. God
performed miracles.
After the school
failed, ladies in the village began to pray in secret for Mrs. Robi.
When she tried to get authorization for the school from the Ministry
of Education, she was told she was too old and that her land was not
big enough. They told her that she did not have enough education to
start a school. “In Africa, women do not have any voice like men.
They would send for me every day to tell me ‘no’ and to laugh.”
Fortunately, Mrs. Robi knew that God specializes in the impossible.
Gideon, the Robi’s
fourth child, was in Bible College in the United States. Upon a
visit home to Kenya, he learned about his mother’s dream for the
school. Her heart was full for these children, who she felt had no
hope. Gideon asked her to gather the children and one teacher. He
took a video of his mother, the teacher and the children and
returned to America. When the Robi’s visited America in 1999, Dr.
Ferrell Drummond, who was then pastoring Mountain Park United
Methodist Church in Lilburn, Georgia, gave Mrs. Robi $1000. She went
home with the money determined to start the school. Her dream
blossomed with 13 children and 2 teachers; Mountain Park Academy was
born.
Dr. Drummond and
Gideon continued to spark interest in the school through a
sponsorship program for the children and the first mission team
visited the school in May, 2000. Mission teams have continued to
visit the school every summer providing medical care, conducting
vacation Bible school and building and stocking the library. In the
summer of 2005, the new building was dedicated and more and more
children came desiring to be a part of the beautiful school on the
hill.
However, Mrs. Robi was
not satisfied. These children needed more. They needed clean water
and better nourishment to improve their health and ability to learn.
With financial backing from student sponsors and donors through the
Kenya project in America, and the hands-on supervision of Mr. Robi,
they begin pursuing a plan to drill a well. Recently, the well was
finished and the children and villagers no longer have to drink from
the same water as the livestock.
Mrs. Robi knew the
children needed physical nourishment along with nurturing of their
minds and spiritual lives. So many children came to school hungry,
so even before there was a commitment for on-going funding, she
started a feeding program at the school. The children now eat
porridge in the morning and lunch in the afternoon while at school.
They come to school just to eat! Just as Jesus modeled, He knew his
followers could not learn from Him when they were hungry. From the
feeding of the five thousand to the Last Supper, Jesus fed His
followers before He taught them. “Before we began the feeding
program,” says Mrs. Robi, “I would tell the children to bring their
lunch to school and I would check on them. Some were begging from
others and others had nothing. Many did not have enough to eat or
only corn and tea without milk or sugar. We first gave them porridge
at 10 a.m., but last year after the medical team told us that so
many of the children were still malnourished, we began to feed them
beans and vegetables for lunch. They are much healthier and the 2006
medical team was pleased with their progress. They do not grow if
they are hungry and they cannot learn. It makes my heart so happy to
see them satisfied.”
When asked about the
future, Mrs. Robi sees the need for a kitchen and dining hall to
prepare and serve food, a program for parents of children attending
the school to grow crops for the school and a new lower school
building for the baby classes, who still gather in the original
sawmill sheds. Mrs. Robi says, “God can do everything. I have a lot
of grandchildren in Kenya and some in America. I believe that your
children and my Kenyan grandchildren will meet. The work that is not
finished by us will be left for our descendents and the next
generation.”
It’s a simple
philosophy to which Mrs. Robi subscribes: “Love the children. Feed
the children. Teach the children.” When asked about the comparison
of her mission with the work of Jesus, she humbly replied, “I’ve
never thought about it that way, but I have remembered Matthew 5:7:
‘Blessed are the merciful, for they shall be shown mercy.’” Isabella
Robi clearly understands the example of Christ as she rises with the
African sun each day with her God-given purpose to love the
children, feed the children and teach the children.
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