04/29/2020
The Dunstan Wai Memorial Charitable Foundation supports the vitally-needed education of girls and young women from South Sudan and northern Uganda by providing them with full scholarships to their local secondary and tertiary schools. As of 2019, its fourteenth year of operation, The Wai Foundation has awarded 1,100 secondary-school scholarships, financed some 450 girls through to graduation, and sponsored the tertiary-level schooling of 34 young women.
Founded in 2005 to honor the memory of Dr. Dunstan Wai, an African scholar and former World Bank staff member, funding for the Foundation’s scholarship program comes from the generosity of individuals committed to supporting girls’ education, many of whom are current or former staff of the World Bank. The Wai Foundation’s operations for the first ten years largely were situated in Kajo Keji County, South Sudan, the site of Dr. Wai’s birth. That changed dramatically in 2016 when internal fighting in South Sudan caused almost the entire population of Kajo Keji to flee across the Ugandan border. Nearly all of the Foundation’s scholarship recipients were forced to move into northern Ugandan refugee camps. Miraculously, with barely a pause, the Foundation’s local administrators were able to successfully place all of these refugees in boarding schools near them.
In 2019, the Wai Foundation awarded scholarships for tuition, room and board to 140 secondary-school girls – some two-thirds of them to South Sudanese refugees. The remainder went to Ugandan nationals, mostly from the Moyo District. Thirty-eight girls graduated with O-level certificates and one with an A-level. Despite the fact that Uganda closed its schools in April, 2020 due to the COVD-19 epidemic, the Foundation remains optimistic that the current scholarship recipients will be able to return to their schools and finish the semester.
At the local level, volunteer program administrators have always been the backbone of our scholarship program. Since our inception, this management has been the responsibility of two orders of Catholic nuns. The first, the Comboni Missionary Society steered operations from 2006 to 2018, providing fearless and energetic young nuns to coordinate the scholarships. When Comboni had to move its operations out of Uganda, the Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, based in Moyo, Uganda, stepped in without hesitation to replace them. It is impossible to overstate how important these competent, dedicated Sisters have been in the success of our undertakings.
In 2011, The Wai Foundation began to award scholarships to carefully-chosen graduates who wished to continue on to the tertiary level. Advanced-level scholars are currently studying at five schools in Juba, South Sudan and at seven in Uganda. Most young women have chosen studies in the medical field because of employment opportunities there. Thirteen tertiary-level Wai recipients have graduated, eight of whom are gainfully employed and five who are poised to follow by the end of their one-year internships.
The Wai Foundation is an almost entirely volunteer organization and our administrative costs are extremely low. Nearly every dollar received goes to an African girl who is desperately seeking an education and whose talents are urgently needed. The Foundation can take great pride that its scholarships are fundamentally altering the future for the recipients.