19-Year old Charity Kengozi is a
trainee of Interlocking Soil Stabilizing Brickmaking (ISSB) at Kyema Technical
College in Masindi. For 5 days, students are taught to produce building blocks with a pressing machine. This contrasts with the traditional method of baking bricks
in a firewood oven. As the ISSB blocks don’t require firewood they pose an eco-friendly
production alternative, hereby contributing to a greener economy.
“I am taking this training to prepare myself for an engineering education and to widen my thinking. Before I never knew that you can make a brick simply from
sand and soil.” says Charity. After the training she wants to make such blocks for her family, to construct a commercial space. Charity would even like to build her future house with ISSB bricks because, thanks to its shape, only one
fifth of the usual amount of cement is needed. This makes it a cheap
alternative.
Nowadays Charity’s family is proud
of her for attempting a carrier in engineering and construction. But that was
not always the case. “My parents did not
approve of me doing this training because not many girls do it. My uncle helped
to convince them by giving examples of girls who make good money from
engineering.” Instead, Charity’s parents wanted her to become a nurse and
pressured her into taking entry exams. But after Charity got accepted into the
nursing training she refused to start. Only then her parents agreed to let her pursue her engineering passion.
The ISSB blocks produced by the
trainees are used to build boarding facilities and lavatories for girls at Kyema
Technical college. After the training the pressing machine will be given to
the college to continue the initiative. This investment should encourage more
girls for careers in construction, as nowadays out of the 22 ISSB trainees only 7 are girls.
These instant trainings are organized by Enabel’s Support to
Skilling Uganda (SSU) project, as part of the Skills Development Fund. The aim is to
provide relevant, practical and qualitative instant-trainings of 10 to
maximum 100 hours.
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