Mission

Africa Schools of Kenya (ASK) is an educational organization designed to increase awareness for Kenyan children on critical global issues such as healthy living, environmental sustainability, animal & wildlife conservation, and cultural diversity.

ASK is dedicated to enriching the lives of Maasai students at Esiteti Primary School, and its surrounding community, through education, economic initiatives, and cross-cultural exchange programs combining traditional Maasai values with 21st century technology. ASK believes education is a key component in eradicating poverty, and creating hope, dignity, and opportunity for these children. ASK’s goal is to create a sustainable education “model” that can be replicated throughout Maasailand.*

*Maasailand covers an area of approximately 100,000 square miles (160,000 kilometers) in southern Kenya and northern Tanzania with a population of over 400,000 Maasai people.

James Ole KameteJames Ole Kamete, Founder of Esiteti School
James Ole Kamete is an elder Maasai living in the Kitirua, in South Kenya, outside Amboseli National Park. For over ten years, he has been instrumental in promoting education for children ages 4-15 in his community of 15,000 Kenyan Maasai. As people in Maasailand heard about children being educated, neighboring village children started to show up. Esiteti Primary School began with six children writing in the dirt under an Acacia tree. Today, Esiteti has 300 students and a state-of-the-art school is being completed with eight classrooms Kindergarten through 8th grade. James' goal is to instill the need for education among the youngest of the Maasai people.

 

Teri GabrielsenTeri Gabrielsen, Founder and Director of Africa Schools of Kenya (ASK)
Teri received a BA in Psychology and a Multi-Subject Teaching Credential (K-6) in the late 70s. After teaching elementary school for several years, she switched careers and went into Advertising & Marketing. Teri was in account management, concentrating primarily on businesses in the travel industry. Teri moved into media sales, and became West Coast Sales Manager for ABC at Los Angeles Magazine and Cosmopolitan Magazine, owned by Hearst Corp. Teri travels to Kenya at least two times a year. While on safari in 1998, she was inspired by the Maasai and their interest in education. Since 2007, Africa Schools of Kenya (ASK), a non-profit founded and directed by Teri, has had a strong presence in East Kenya, working in conjunction with over 8,000 Massai and 300 children at Esiteti Primary School.

The Maasai Culture

Maasai CultureOccupying the fertile grassland of the Rift Valley and surrounding uplands, the pastoral and nomadic Maasai are probably the most renowned Kenyan tribe. For centuries the Maasai have moved cattle in a constant search for water and fresh grazing. Tall and lean with brilliant red cloths tied at the shoulder, the morani (warriors) can usually be seen armed with a spear, sword or club. The enkang is the basic economic and social unit of the Maasai, where a semi-permanent grouping of several families live together in 10 to 20 huts encircled by an impenetrable thorn fence. The low, circular huts (constructed by women in the group) consist of interwoven branches plastered together with a combination of mud and cow dung. Although the women are often seemingly in the background of the cultural context, they are the backbone of the culture; they build houses and look after schoolchildren. They also have influential roles in enabling girls to attend school.