Madagascar
Schooling of children and
community development in a sub-desert region
per day for 1 family with 10 children
One of the poorest regions of the planet, isolated and arid, 7 hours by muddy roads from Tuléar, in the south of the country.
SOS Villages d’Enfants (SOSVE), recognized association of public utility in Madagascar, active for more than 30 years in the field of the protection of children and young people. In 2021, it supported 44,318 people spread over 7 regions.
Toro Hay, local partner
A dictation for a good cause
The Brechbühl school came up with the idea in 2013. It’s simple and brilliant at the same time: students ask parents and friends to commit to paying them the sum of their choice according to the number of words correctly spelled in the dictation. Students of all ages can participate in the Dictée du Chœur! For example in 1P, four-year-olds must spell the word MADAGASCAR correctly by pasting the correct letters in the correct order. And, for each well-placed letter, they recover the amount promised by their dear sponsors!
The idea is gaining momentum. The Don du Chœur is organizing a major Dictée du Chœur in 2017 with all the private schools to cover the running costs of the Andohasatra school for 18 months!
Situation
Limited access to water affects more than 1.6 million people in southern Madagascar. Often around a single well, some 70 families with 10 to 12 children each survive in mud houses on less than one euro a day. Access to education has become impossible there since the passage of the cyclone, which destroyed the small school. It had only one class for 100 students of all levels.
Priorities
Improve access to water. Build a public nursery and primary school with six classes with a canteen and a well, in order to be able to accommodate and feed the 360 children of the village. Acquire the necessary equipment and furniture for them. Provide electricity through solar panels. Provide academic support. Create a protective environment around children by offering their parents training in income-generating activities. Inform to better enforce the rights of women and children.
Objectives achieved
- Thanks to the Don du Chœur concert and after completion of the work in Andohasatra-Betioky, 360 children were able to go to school for the first time in their lives. In Switzerland, the fundraising continued in 2017 around the Dictée du Chœur*: for 18 months, eight private schools helped to finance a daily meal, uniforms and school supplies for these distant friends.
- From 2018, the operation of the school canteen of the Andohasatra-Betioky school is ensured by the World Food Program (WFP), an essential factor for the success of the long-term education of all these children who live in food insecurity and the very great drought.
- An installed manual pump provides access to water and supplies the school despite the significant drop in the water table.
In Betioky, SOS Children’s Villages opened a community support center ten years ago for 1,000 deprived people: schooling, professional integration, maternal and child protection, food assistance, etc. It is the manager of this center who watches over the public school of Andohasatra in collaboration with our local partner Toro Hay and in coordination with Claude-Alain Burky, project manager and based in Tuléar.
Over the years, a library, toilets and additional accommodation for the director and teachers have been built. The purchase of 13 bicycles facilitates the daily movements of the latter, in full sun in this sub-desert region. - Since 2021, Le Don du Choeur continues to support access to drinking water, the development of reading and training programs adapted to teachers. We have also participated – thanks to SOS Children’s Villages Betioky – in the literacy of women and their training in various activities (weaving, goat breeding, market gardening) to gradually give them financial autonomy.
Today
The climate crisis in southern Madagascar is intensifying. Don du Chœur is committed for the next three years to a new community support project with SOS Children’s Villages Madagascar. This project is called Miranga, a Mahafaly word (tribe of the region) which means evolution and development. This name is directly linked to our common objective: the development of the Andohasatra community in a tangible and sustainable way by giving it access to basic social services. Families are supported in the development of their income-generating activities. Of course, the purchase of school supplies for 200 primary school students in Andohasatra continues more than ever. And, for the first time, it is a question of financing the school support of 30 young people who continue their secondary studies in Betioky. Help us to help them!


















10 élèves du primaire à Andohasatra :