Why Inclusion Must Reach the Whole Support Circle

For Moyo Mzuri, inclusion is not a slogan. It is the daily work of making sure a child is seen at home, welcomed at school, connected to care, and protected from stigma in the community.
Many children with disabilities are excluded because several barriers meet at once: poverty, distance from services, lack of school materials, limited therapy access, and caregiver pressure. A single intervention rarely solves all of that.
That is why Moyo Mzuri works through a support circle. The team listens first, responds to urgent needs, connects families to the right programme pathway, and follows up so children are not forgotten after the first contact.
When caregivers are supported, schools are engaged, and communities are sensitised, a child has a stronger chance to learn, participate, and live with dignity.
Touching hearts, empowering lives is more than a slogan. It is the way Moyo Mzuri keeps practical support connected to real households.
Florence Nandudu Garden of Resilience
Keeping Children in Busitema in School

In Busitema, many children were missing out on education not because they lacked the desire to learn, but because they lacked something as basic as books. Without these materials, staying in school became difficult, and some children were at risk of dropping out entirely.
Through Moyo Mzuri, essential scholastic materials were provided to these children, giving them the opportunity to return to class, participate actively, and learn with confidence. The impact was renewed excitement among the children and a sense of relief and hope among their caregivers.
However, this is just one community, and many more children still face the same challenge. A fair chance at education often begins with the simple tools that make learning possible every day.
With just $30, you can keep a child in school by providing the materials they need to learn and thrive.
