Tag Archives: Scholarship

The Bartels family

2020 Global 5K participants from USA, Canada, Nigeria, Uganda


The Bartels family
The Bartels family

By Patty Huston-Holm

“If you want to go fast, go alone; but if you want to go far, go together.”

The African proverb was the essence for the first few years of the Global 5K, a five-kilometer (3.1 miles) walk/run/social engagement activity sponsored by the Uganda Christian University (UCU) Partners non-profit organization. Abby Bartels, who lived for 10 years on the University campus and raised three children there with her husband, Mark, is the founder.

The year was 2015 and a time when many organizations were jumping on a 5K fund-raising bandwagon. For UCU Partners, it was less about raising money and more about building a relationship base among alumni of the Uganda Studies Program (USP), a one-semester, UCU learning experience for students enrolled in Christian universities, mostly in the United States. Mark Bartels, executive director for UCU Partners, started USP on the UCU Mukono campus. UCU Partners values USP alumni because they are a unique set of donors who have lived and studied at UCU.

“The event was actually better than expected because it strengthened connections not just with American students but with Honor’s College students and staff,” Abby, now living in Pennsylvania, said. “In addition to a time for remembering and re-connecting about a cultural, Christ-centered experience, it became an opportunity to raise money for Ugandan students in need.”

According to Ashton Davey, UCU Partners fundraising coordinator and facilitator for the 2020 Global 5K, nearly 200 people participated this year. Despite the hiccup of having an event on April 4 in the midst of worldwide COVID-19 lockdowns, more than $3,000 was generated, mostly by participant purchases of the event’s green T-shirt.  The funds will supplement tuition for 12 needy students at UCU.

“Many participants found the Global 5K to be good motivation to get out of the house and simultaneously support a great cause,” Ashton said. “The event’s flexibility allowed people to participate alone from wherever they live, which allowed them to adhere to social distancing guidelines.”

So what was it like engaging in an event during an unprecedented worldwide pandemic?  From Canada, Nigeria and Uganda, and nearly half of the 50 USA states, here is a sample of thoughts compiled from virtual interviews.

  • Atimango Innocent (Minna, Nigeria) – former UCU Honors College student who previously benefited from the scholarship assistance and was once a USP staff member; now engaged with The Navigators, two-year discipleship training program
Innocent, running in Nigeria
Innocent, running in Nigeria

In the midst of focusing on Mathew 28: 19-20 and its message about “making disciples of all nations,” Innocent and a friend, Drew Uduimoh, did 7 kilometers (4.3 miles) for the Global 5K. She has done it every year except for maybe one when the event didn’t get off the ground. For 2020 and while Nigeria reported more than 800 virus cases, she jogged around the town where she lives with no lockdown restrictions.

“I feel personal about it since I was one of the students who benefited directly from the funding,” she said of the Global 5K. “But I also find it a time to do reflections on people and on the Lord.”

  • Mikaela Hummel (Pakenham, Ontario, Canada) – USP student in 2019, while studying at Houghton (NY) College, where she receives her undergraduate degree in May; preparing to begin studies for a Masters of Science degree in physiotherapy
Mikaela, at right, with her family in Canada
Mikaela, at right, with her family in Canada

On the day of the Global 5K, it was 10 Celsius (50 Fahrenheit) in Pakenham, Ontario, where Mikaela participated in the event with her mom, dad, sister and dog. She wore long sleeves under her green shirt and her traditional African kitenge-design shorts. The area where they ran was a bit quieter than usual as COVID-19 restrictions had most stores closed and gatherings limited to five people or less.

“The experience in Uganda helped me to pause and think about what is really important in life,” she said. “The Global 5K is a time to reflect on that again. The pandemic puts the brakes on even stronger, reminding us to trust God.”

  • Erin Neilson (Gallup, New Mexico) – USP student in 2006 while majoring in music at Messiah College in Mechanicsburg, Pa.; now raising two children and serving on a church music team with her husband, Phil, a middle school English teacher and also a 2006 USP student and USP program assistant 2008-2009
USP alumni, Erin and Phil, and family in New Mexico
USP alumni, Erin and Phil, and family in New Mexico

On the date of the 5K Zoom discussion on April 20, New Mexico had more than 2,000 confirmed cases of cornonavirus. Sixteen days earlier, the Neilson family of four, living in a small town near part of the Navajo Nation, did 5 kilometers.  A special highlight was that Christiana, age 5, made the entire distance on her own. Caleb, a toddler, was carried.

“We had been hoping to hike with friends, but due to social distancing requirements, we ended up with time just as a family,” Erin said.  Fourteen years after our USP experience I am reminded of the value Ugandans place on presence and am trying to live that daily with my children.”

  • Laura Sollenberger (Gainesville, Florida) – USP student in 2018 while majoring in exercise science at Messiah College in Mechanicsburg, Pa.; now finishing her Penn State University bachelor’s degree in nursing through on-line classes while living back home with her parents
Global 5K Zoom with Laura (in Florida)
Global 5K Zoom with Laura (in Florida)

For Laura, her career move from occupational therapy to nursing was stimulated by a 150-hour internship at the Church of Uganda hospital (Mukono), where she realized the intimate and critical role of health care workers at a patient’s side. COVID-19 has reinforced that decision with some frustration that she can’t be on the front line now; she graduates in December.

Laura’s UCU experience in 2018 was “life-changing with deeper connections to friends and God, clearer purpose, better understanding of systemic injustices, and the challenge of learning from new cultural perspectives,” she said.

Laura planned to re-connect with 10 of those friends by participating in the Global 5K and making rolex afterwards in Lancaster, Pa. Instead, she is sheltered with family in her home state of Florida. Her mom and dad did the 5K with her.

“We did a Zoom afterwards,” she said of her USP friends. She added, “I will definitely go back to Uganda someday.”

  • Molho Bernard (Kilowoza/Mukono District, Uganda) – 2018 UCU graduate with a Bachelor of Arts in Education, working with the Honors College and USP up to February 2020 when Ugandan universities closed due to COVID restrictions while pursuing a Masters of Education in Planning and Administration.
Bernard and young friend, Matthew
Bernard and young friend, Matthew

On April 4, Bernard engaged in his second Global 5K by walking around his compound – different than the previous year when there were more people and it occurred on the campus.  His “informal” companion during his warm-up with push ups and laps around the compound was a two-year-old named Mathew who lives in the same area and “loves coming to my room to watch me do some art work.” The 5K has special meaning to Bernard as he was once a recipient of the money raised through the event.

In 2018, my family was going through a financial breakdown, and I was afraid of getting a dead semester,” he said. “Through the proceeds of 5K through UCU Partners, I was able to have my tuition and graduation fees cleared.”

Bernard continues to appreciate the Christian and academic standards at UCU. The environment has enabled him to “know Christ more, and I have grown up more in loving, trusting and obeying Him.”

Ashton, who splits her time between Uganda and Kansas, said it was “heartwarming” to see social media posts of people supporting Uganda Christian University in the 5K green T-shirts – from those  “running in rural villages in Uganda and families hiking to wave across the state border at each other to USP alumni organizing a Zoom call to reflect on the lessons they learned in Uganda.”

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To support Uganda Christian University programs, students, activities and services, go to www.ugandapartners.org and click on the “donate” button, or contact UCU Partners Executive Director, Mark Bartels, at m.t.bartels@ugandapartners.org. For more information or with ideas for the 2021 Global 5K, contact Ashton at ashton@ugandapartners.org.

Ronnie Mwesigwa, UCU School of Medicine Student (UgandaPartners Photo)

Student Profile: Deaths of infant, grandmother drove Mwesigwa to study medicine

Ronnie Mwesigwa, UCU School of Medicine Student (UgandaPartners Photo)
Ronnie Mwesigwa, UCU School of Medicine Student (UgandaPartners Photo)

(In 2017, the World Health Organization reported Uganda’s doctor-to-patient ratio to be one doctor per every 25,725 patients. This story represents one Uganda Christian University School of Medicine student example of how that gap might be filled.)

By Douglas Olum
In 2015, Ronnie Mwesigwa lost his grandmother – a death he believes was caused by negligent doctors. Her final note urged her grandson to “study medicine and become a doctor.” He is.

“The doctor who was serving her postponed her treatment many times even when she needed immediate attention,” said Mwesigwa, who is among 50 students pursuing Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degrees at the Uganda Christian University School of Medicine (UCUSoM). The 20-year-old Ugandan born to a statistician dad, John Bosco Asiimwe, and a civil engineer mom, Priscilla Kobusinge, believes if he had been a doctor, he could have saved his grandmother’s life.

Inspiration
He is the first born to both parents and the only child in their broken marriage. He is the only boy among his mother’s three children and one of the four boys among his father’s eight children.  A step-father was a doctor. He urges his siblings to pursue sciences and come to the rescue of Uganda, especially in the ailing health sector.

“My first inspiration to study medicine was when I traveled to visit my step-dad in Botswana where he worked in 2012 during my senior one vacation,” Mwesigwa said. “He was called around 1 O’clock in the night to attend to an emergency. I saw him pace up and down, trying to figure out a solution for the patient, a child that unfortunately passed on. I saw him sit down, hold his head at his palm and weep.”

Loss of Mwesigwa’s maternal grandmother to cancer occurred while he sat for his final Ordinary Level examinations (Uganda Certificate of Education).

After those two losses, Mwesigwa was determined to change that story for others. He said that he cares about people and wants to help them live happy lives by keeping them healthy.

Before his admission to the UCU School of Medicine, Mwesigwa was looking at studies in bio-medical Science at Makerere University, the oldest and most popular university in the country. But he knew that would not bring him to his career goal.

Challenge
Unlike many students facing financial challenges as they pursue their dream course, Mwesigwa says his only challenge this semester has been keeping pace with the course work that accumulates every day. A lover of challenges because of their push to make him a better person, he is up to it.

Motivation
Even amidst the demanding course requirements and lectures, Mwesigwa says he finds his solace in listening to inspirational music, watching football and studying the UCU Christian-related foundation courses. These include: Old Testament, New Testament, Ethics, Christian World Views, among others.

Before joining the school, his greatest motivation has been his mother who believed in his dream and continuously encouraged him to chase it. He said she was the one who brought home to him a copy of the newspaper that contained the UCUSoM call for applications.

Desire to serve
After finishing his five-year course, Mwesigwa wants to work in Uganda and contribute towards healing the ailing health sector. He says while money is a big factor when it comes to health care, he also is concerned about the huge patient-to-doctor ratio in Uganda, a thing that he thinks partially contributes to the poor health service delivery in the country.

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More information about the Uganda Christian University School of Medicine can be obtained at https://www.ugandapartners.org/priority-projects.  To support students, books and facilities at the medical school, contact Mark Bartels, executive director, UCU Partners, at m.t.bartels@ugandapartners.org or https://www.ugandapartners.org/donate/.

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