Recently Brenda Musasizi, UgCLA's coordinator, sent me the Association's recently updated membership list. There are 106 names! Of these, four are partner organizations that don't actually offer library services, and two others are definitely inactive; but the rest are all in the business of disseminating information and promoting reading, even if some forty haven't yet paid their subscriptions for this year.
These institutions are tremendously diverse. Some, including the FAVL-managed Kitengesa Community Library, are well established, with collections of several thousand books and ongoing programs for women, children, and other sectors of the community. Some have only just started, having buildings but no books or books but no buildings. We have had dramatic success stories with some of the poorest. When I first visited the Bunabumali Good Samaritan Orphan and Needy Project in April 2010, it had no building and virtually no books. Now it has both and with the help of Hawk Children's Fund of UMES is setting up a Health Education Centre. The URLCODA Community Library and Mpolyabigere Community Libraries have likewise been able to put up buildings thanks to Hawk Children's Fund (see earlier UgCLA posts). Now, UgCLA is implementing a project for Book Aid International through which ten libraries are receiving 700 books each and refurbishment grants of about $1500--for the Randa Community Library this again will mean a new building.
Since it was launched in 2007, UgCLA has channeled grants to 31 libraries, and some have received two or three. That leaves seventy still to be served, and more will doubtless join us before we can reach them all. So the task ahead is enormous; but UgCLA is already a strong network with tremendous potential for providing information and entertainment to impoverished Ugandans. When will such networks be established in other African countries?


