Our journey

It started with Tin.

From a winter trip in 2005 to a school for 200 children. Twenty years in four chapters.

How it began

A winter trip. A T-shirt seller. A promise.

Guy Borrey — a plumber from Lille, Belgium — and his partner Tina were looking for winter sun in 2005. Egypt was out because of the attacks. Israel because of the war. Tina said: why not Gambia? They knew no one there.

On the beach they met a man selling T-shirts. They didn’t want a T-shirt, but they wanted to talk. He said: “I have a school here. And like most schools in Gambia, we don’t have money.” They went to visit. They promised to come back.

Tin died in 2008. Guy could have stopped. He didn’t. Every classroom built since is dedicated to her.

Timeline

Sindola, year by year.

2005 · Sindola is founded.
2005

A building is first rented — Sindola is founded (means “home” in Mandinka).

2005

Just got a pencil — still not quite sure what to do with it.

2005

A bit shy on the first day.

2005

This “crowd” (about fifty kids) has to somehow fit in the classroom.

2005

This “crowd” (about fifty kids) has to somehow fit in the classroom.

2006 · Everything scarce — no board, no notebooks, no money.
2006

Nothing to hang the board on the wall with.

2006

No place to write.

2006

No money for notebooks — everything goes to rent.

2007 · We bought our own land.
2007

Money raised to buy our own land — the cleanup begins. +10

2007

A short lunch break to catch our breath.

2007

Building a “watchman’s house” with reed mats. +36

2007

Working till dark. +8

2007

Coating the walls with mortar — then finishing with colourful paint. +8

2007

Installing a pulley to draw water from our well. +1

2008 · Mud blocks, by hand.
2008

Preparing the well — we’ll need lots of water for our homemade “mud blocks.” +10

2008

Mixing sand, pouring it into moulds. +2

2008

Left to dry in the sun. +9

2010 · The first chairs, the first board.
2010

Now it’s real — chairs collected. +5

2010

Still no desks, but a board on the wall. +3

2013 · It starts to look like a real classroom.
2013

Tables and chairs delivered — tested straight away. +5

2013

Do they fit in the classroom? +4

2013

Decorations and “reminders” on the wall — finally starting to look like a real classroom. +8

2014 · A vegetable garden and a chicken coop.
2014

Our new project: a vegetable garden. +3

2014

Plenty of mangoes. +4

2014

And a chicken coop.

2015 · Time for a new watchman’s house.
2015

What our “watchman’s house” looks like after ten years — leaks in the roof, walls giving way.

2015

Time for a new house. +3

2015

Two separate bedrooms — a bit more privacy.

2016 · Digging the well deeper, concreting the walls.
2016

The well silted up and collapsed from heavy use — time to dig deeper and concrete the walls.

2016

Everything by hand, bucket by bucket. +4

2016

Water again, smooth walls — hopefully it holds for years. +6

2016

Reinstalling the pulley…

2016

All cleaned up.

2020 · COVID — everything stalls, we build where we can.
2020

The concrete floor slab.

2020

Plastic against damp, weaving the rebar. +1

2020

Then concreting. +2

2020

And… making concrete blocks again. +6

2021 · Walls going back up.
2021

Finally moving forward again — walls going up. +3

2025 · Three new classrooms under construction.

This time properly — by the book. +4

Making blocks for the umpteenth time — but no sand blocks now, we use cement. +5

Digging the foundation trench — deep enough that we can add a floor later if needed. +5

The right kind of stones delivered.

Mixing sand and cement, then adding the stones. +5

Add water and we have concrete. +1

Filling the trench — placing rebar for the vertical columns at the same time. +4

The next chapter is now.

In September 2026 we open three new classrooms. You can be part of it.

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