A United States-based charity organization, Kedrick Scribner Foundation, on Tuesday, June 27, extended its Humanitarian Campaign to Widows of Fallen Heroes of the Nigerian Police Force. The foundation has offered university scholarships to 25 children of the widows that successfully pass their senior school certificate examination.
The programme tagged ‘The Widow’s Mite 2.0’ took place at the United Church of Christ in Nigeria AKA HEKAN located in the Mounted Troops Police Barracks in Lagos.
Kedrick Scribner Foundation, which globally provides resources necessary for people to live sustainably, also offered one-year medical insurance to 180 Police Widows in the state.
Speaking at the end of the programme, the founder of the foundation, Dr Kedrick Scribner said the scholarship will help the widows achieve their dream of sending their children to the university.
Scribner said, “We started with Student’s Career Talk and we partnered with Byinks Foundation, who was able to come in and we share the responsibility of giving scholarships to students. For students that are entering colleges, we are going to give them full scholarships from 100 levels to the final level as long as a keep their grades up.
“If you don’t keep your grades up, we cannot continue the scholarship. This scholarship will give light to some children that would never have the opportunity to pay for a university education.
“From the scholarship, we have 25 students but this is not the end of the process because even if you have a child in the primary or secondary school, we have a scholarship for you. We programmed 100 women for the medical insurance but we ended up giving 180 of them the insurance cover for the next year.”
Speaking further on the scholarship, one of the partners of the programme and President/Founder of Byinks Foundation, Banire Olayinka, said the foundation would help the selected students to gain admission into any federal university of their choice.
Olayinka said the scholarship covers school fees for the duration of the course, acceptance fees and every other necessary payment. He noted that the students are at liberty to study any course of their choice.
He said, “We were able to confer scholarships to students that have written their West African Examination and are expecting results in July and August. In doing that, we are going to ensure that we will help them to gain admission to our federal universities. We don’t do state universities and we don’t do private universities except Lagos State University.
“Aside from that, we are also going to take some students that are already in school to see how we can support them in a few ways and those that are about to gain admission to follow up on them.
“The modality of selection is that the students must be from public school, they must be from this community, they must be children of widows and they must be orphans with quality WAEC results.
“You must pass the core subjects that would qualify you to gain admission into the university. And there is no exception to the course the person can study and we don’t expect them to give back to us rather they should look for other people to help.”
On his part, US Representative of Washington DC, Dr Oye Owolewa, called on Nigerian-American citizens to come back home and support the less-privilege in the country.
“I have decided to be here to give back to my people and also show them what could be done when you have a good heart. The efforts of The Kedrick Scribner Foundation would restore hope because we have people who have lost it all and people who live in areas that are not conducive.
“This is our way of telling them that we care and we are trying to bring the private sector and other Nigerian-Americans to the table not only to do what we are doing right now but making it bigger in supporting other communities that deserve this as well.
“I hope that my presence will inspire people to do more. You don’t have to be an elected official or a person of note, you just have to care. But there is an added level of responsibility for us Nigerian-American to come back home, see where we are from especially if you are born in America like myself, to see that there are opportunities for us to get involved in the betterment of the people from our communities,” he said.