Gitite

Community Library Project

Education

Our Story

The Gitite Community Library began long before the first brick was laid. It began with a childhood — one filled with long walks to school, mud‑walled classrooms, and a world where storybooks were a rare luxury. Growing up in Gitite, the founder knew what it meant to learn without resources, to imagine without books, and to dream without a place that nurtured curiosity.

Years later, watching his own children enjoy libraries, colourful books, and digital learning, a familiar ache returned. The contrast was impossible to ignore. And a quiet question began to form:

What if children in Gitite could have the same chance to read, imagine, and dream?

That question became the seed of a movement.

How It All Began

The story of the Gitite Community Library began in the most ordinary of moments — inside the founder’s own home. One afternoon, while sorting through shelves, he noticed dozens of storybooks his children had outgrown. Beautiful books. Colourful books. Books filled with adventure, imagination, and possibility.

And in that moment, a memory resurfaced — a childhood in Gitite where storybooks were almost nonexistent. A childhood where imagination had to stretch far beyond the pages that were never there.

He paused and thought: “These books could mean everything to a child back home.”

That simple realisation sparked the first step. He began sending small batches of books to his village — a few at a time, tucked into suitcases or shipped with care. Each parcel felt like sending a piece of hope home.

The response from the community was overwhelming. Teachers shared how children passed the books around eagerly. Parents spoke of how their children were reading stories they had never imagined. The impact was undeniable.

This small act of giving grew into something bigger.

In 2018, the founder launched a wider book collection drive. Friends, family, colleagues, and neighbours rallied behind the vision. Together, they gathered over 800 books, which were donated to two schools:

  • Gitite Primary School

  • Kinja Primary School

For many pupils, it was the first time they held a storybook of their own.

That moment — seeing how books could transform curiosity into confidence — planted the seed for something even greater: a dedicated community library where every child could read, learn, and dream freely.

The Birth of the Library Dream

Turning that vision into reality required courage, creativity, and community. The founder led the fundraising effort through a sponsored run, a community cake‑bake sale, and countless hours of advocacy. Family, friends, and well‑wishers rallied behind the dream, giving generously and wholeheartedly.

On 26 February 2025, the community gathered in the spirit of harambee to break ground. Parents, elders, and young people worked side by side to prepare the foundation. The joy was indescribable.

Through the joys and pains of fundraising, the construction was completed in May 2026. What began as a dream is now a physical space — ready to become a centre of learning, creativity, and community connection.

The founder remains eternally grateful to everyone who believed in the vision and helped turn it into a standing building.

What the Library Will Offer

Once fully equipped, the Gitite Community Library will become a vibrant hub for the entire community — a place where learning, imagination, and opportunity come alive.

It will offer:

  • A home for the 800+ donated books

  • A quiet, safe space for reading and study

  • A community information centre

  • Internet access

  • Basic computer training

  • Photocopying and printing services

  • Lifelong learning opportunities for children and adults

The library will support over 250 pupils at Gitite Primary School and serve the wider Gitite community.

 

The Next Phase: May–August 2026

With Constructon complete, the projects enters the Books, which includes:

  • Collecting children’s books (English & Kiswahili, especially African authors)

  • Gathering young adult and adult fiction

  • Sourcing reference materials and textbooks

  • Collecting computers, laptops, and tablets

  • Setting up shelves, cataloguing books, and preparing reading spaces

  • Final preparations for the official handover in August 2026

This is the phase that transforms a building into a true library — a place where knowledge lives and grows.

Where You Can Help

Books Needed

  • Children’s short story books (English & Kiswahili, African writers preferred)

  • Children’s picture books

  • Young adult fiction (English & Kiswahili)

  • Adult fiction

  • English-language reference materials

  • Natural sciences textbooks

  • Social sciences textbooks

Technology Needed

  • Desktop computers

  • Laptops

  • Tablets

These resources will power:

  • A community internet café

  • Digital literacy training

  • Access to online learning

  • Modern learning opportunities for pupils and adults

Contact for Donations

Jennifer Mwihaki

(Headteacher)

world
+254 0722 871 634

Alfred Waithaka

 (Project Sponsor)

world

+2547122 500 32 

united-kingdom (1)

+44 07597671399