Bazaar to help Zambian students
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Alicia Robinson
Antiques scoured from flea markets, handcrafted jewelry and paintings
by local artists have been collected with one goal -- to help
students nearly 10,000 miles away.
Members of Grace Fellowship Church are holding a bazaar today to
benefit Northrise University in Zambia, which was founded by one of
the church’s former pastors.
Moffat Zimba was a pastor at Grace Fellowship Church for seven
years before he and his wife returned to his native Zambia to start
the school, which is one of three universities in the country and the
only private one, said church member Brett Craig, whose husband is a
pastor at the Christian church.
“[Zimba] was raised in the slums in Africa and he learned to write
in the dirt, and he had a vision to start a university,” Craig said.
After returning to Zambia last year, Zimba raised enough money to
build a five-story facility for his school of agriculture and
computer science. The school’s 60 students began their first classes
in January, Craig said.
Proceeds from the bazaar will go toward running the university and
sponsoring students’ tuition, which is $1,200 a year.
Visitors to the bazaar will be able to peruse brochures about the
school or watch a video of some church members’ visit to the school.
“It’s a real hands-on thing,” Craig said. “It’s not just some
random mission thing that we don’t know much about.”
Most of the bazaar’s 25 vendors don’t dedicate their full time to
their crafts, but sell things mainly by word of mouth, said Diane
Cotton, who is hosting the bazaar in the backyard of her Santiago
Drive home. Unique items for sale will include stationery and
invitations, handmade stuffed animals, monogrammed canvas bags,
jewelry and art.
“You will not come here and find little crystal bracelets and
crocheted doilies and that kind of thing,” Cotton said. “It will be
very upscale, very special.”
Also pitching in at the bazaar will be Brittany Edmonston, a
church member and junior at Newport Harbor High School. After hearing
about Zimba’s school, Edmonston and her friend Stephanie Dorr formed
a club and solicited donations to help pay Zambian students’ tuition.
They’ve already raised $3,000, but they hope to generate enough to
sponsor three or four students, Edmonston said.
She’ll be selling drinks, which she convinced someone to donate,
at the bazaar to raise more money for students. She said she hopes
the event will get more people interested in helping to raise money
for the Zambian university, which aims to get students to use what
they learn to benefit their country.
“We’re so fortunate here, and these people [in Zambia], they
barely get food every day,” Edmonston said. “The purpose is to make
them stay there and spread it to other students. It’s a foundation to
build a better country through agriculture.”
The bazaar will be held today from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 2424
Santiago Drive, Newport Beach.
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