NWT Garden Party – back by popular demand

Despite advertising last year’s Garden Party as (possibly) the last ever, we would like to invite you to an afternoon of great cakes and great company once more.

Please block out the 20th June from 2pm in your diaries.

It will, as ever, be held at 1 Apple Tree Walk, Clymping BN17 5QN.

All offers of help and making cakes and sandwiches are very welcome.

Anything but boring – a borehole for Tikondane

Exciting news! The borehole and 5000 litre water tank has been built and is in use. As a result, Tikondane, the centre for street children we have supported for many years, now has access to all the clean and drinkable water they need. Before this, they were frequently unable to access enough water to cater for the large numbers of children at the transit shelter.

The watertank and borehole structure when it was near completion.

Through your generosity, they now have everything they need for washing, cleaning, the children’s demonstration vegetable garden, and making briquettes for cooking. And they no longer have to pay expensive water bills!

When Sister Marie provided her final report confirming the completion of the project, she shared “The borehole project is a very big gift for us as organization and for the children in particular. Having a borehole water supply system in our transit shelter will help save money from the high water bill,  and reduce or curb the shortage of water supply. Thus,  we can carry out our daily activities harmoniously without much restraining. Thank you very much for your generosity and your love for vulnerable children that we support at Tikondane.”

This Christmas, give a gift that really bores!

This year, skip the socks and surprise your loved ones with a truly boring Christmas present — a gift that funds an essential part of the new borehole water supply system for the Tikondane transit shelter for street children in Malawi!

Every contribution helps us reach the total project cost of MK 22,652,140 (approximately £10,000) for this hugely important water system.

£40 could buy part of the tank and pipes

£25 could buy a bag of cement. (We’ve said it before, but nothing says Christmas like a bag of cement)

£15 could buy all the brickforce wire needed

You can donate via justgiving.com/campaign/boring-christmas or directly into our bank account with the reference ‘Christmas’.

Once you have bought a boring Christmas present you can download a gift certificate to put under the tree.

This image shows a borehole waterpump elsewhere

Our newest project – a borehole for Tikondane

We are pleased to announce our newest project: funding a borehole water supply system for Tikondane, the transit shelter in Malawi’s capital that NWT has supported since 2007.

Tikondane provides shelter, meals, counselling, and support to children who have been living on the streets. Tikondane’s social workers try to reunite the children with their extended families or their home village. On an average day, the shelter cares for about 25 children, and this number can rise to 60 during school holidays, serving over 700 children a year.

Currently, the project faces frequent water shortages, with the Lilongwe Water Board supply often being insufficient for the large number of children and day-to-day activities like cooking, washing, and cleaning. The transit shelter, which runs 24/7, views poor water supply as a risk that could lead to child sickness.

Our support will help fund the new borehole system, which will:

  • Ensure proper care: Provide enough water for the proper care and safety of the children.
  • Protect health: Help prevent the outbreak of diseases caused by water shortages.
  • Support sustainability: Provide water for their demonstration vegetable garden and for soaking paper to make sustainable briquettes for cooking.
  • Reduce costs: Help the project avoid high institutional water bills, freeing up funds for their main budget.

We are excited to help Tikondane secure this essential resource with your help, providing a reliable source of clean water and a healthier environment for the children in their care.

20 years of the Nick Webber Trust 

On May 30, 2025, the Nick Webber Trust will be 20 years old. In that time, thanks to the generosity of our supporters, we’ve raised an incredible £917,397, and spent every last penny of it on helping the people of Malawi.

That money has gone an astonishingly long way. Unlike at bigger NGOs with sizable staffs and overheads to pay, donations to the Trust are spent exclusively on funding our projects. And because all of these projects are partnerships with the communities in Malawi we support, the value of every pound is multiplied.

In our first 20 years, we have

  • Built 20 brick classrooms in five rural primary schools
  • Built classrooms, a science and computer laboratory, a teacher’s house and a hostel at a secondary school, plus a nursery school, library, children’s centre, kitchen, toilets and vocational skills training block in the same village.
  • Funded several hundred places at state boarding schools for children who had been living on the streets, and for others from disadvantaged backgrounds, having paid 1014 years’ worth of school fees, and 63 years’ worth of fees for college and university courses.
  • Built a safe house for women and children fleeing domestic violence.
  • Funded distributions of over 1200 reusable sanitary packs to female school pupils.
  • Provided a fully-stocked law library to Malawi’s Legal Aid Department.
  • Sponsored five students through the full four years of their law degrees.
  • Helped establish the first palliative care centre in Malawi.
    …and much more. It is simply impossible to put a figure on the transformative impact of the Nick Webber Trust’s work in Malawian communities.

    With huge cuts being made to foreign aid budgets, in the UK, US and other developed nations, charitable giving is more needed than ever. Help us reach £1 million in the Trust’s 21st year – we need to raise £82,603 in the next 12 months to reach our target.

    Sr Marie Sakana, project co-ordinator at the Tikondane Centre for Street Children, in Lilongwe, describes the Trust as “a partner we can rely on,” in an ongoing 18-year relationship.

    “We have seen a lot of changes in the lives of the children who had once lost hope in their life but found another meaning to life with this support,” she says. Read more from Sr Marie Sakana.

    In recent years, enabling more girls to remain in education has been a major focus for the Trust. We have built safe hostels and provided desks and reusable sanitary packs. Esther, deputy headteacher of Mzuzi secondary school, says that the sanitary packs have reduced absenteeism, promoted menstrual hygiene, reduced menstrual poverty and empowered girls to stay in school. “Girls are able to attend classes regularly as their menstruation hygiene needs are met leading to improved educational outcomes,” she says. “Managing their menstruation with dignity and confidence allows our girls to focus on their studies.”

    In December 2023, Malawi’s Women Lawyers Association (WLA) launched a safehouse for gender-based violence survivors in Lilongwe, built by the Trust. The house has four large bedrooms, each capable of accommodating a family while they make more permanent arrangements. “The legal assistance we provide is not enough if the survivors are not in a safe space,” says Pachalo Mwenelupembe, a member of the WLA. We are thankful to the Nick Webber Trust for funding this project and we look forward to further collaborations in all matters advancing the rights of women and girls.”

    Many of the graduates of the educational programmes we support have gone on to have successful careers and continue to give back to the community. Tadala Chinkwezule, for instance, one of five students whose undergraduate studies were funded by donors to the Trust, is a notary public, commissioner of oaths and certified International Arbitrator, and sits on several NGO boards. “When I was awarded the scholarship I was greatly honoured and delighted to be selected for such a prestigious award,” she says. “It was of great assistance especially as I was unable to personally cover for my tuition as at the time of pursuing my law degree both my beloved parents had passed on. I am forever grateful to the Nick Webber Trust Scholarship and for the many opportunities that it has given to others for them to advance their education for a brighter future.”
Children at Tidzuke Orphan Care

Come to help us celebrate the Trust’s first 20 years at our annual garden party on June 14th, from 2pm at 1 Apple Tree Walk, Clymping, West Sussex, BN17 5QN.