We develop high-quality education centers, provide community health programs, create income generating opportunities, and grow alongside local leaders. This multi-faceted, participatory approach builds local capacities and long-term relationships to create lasting, community-wide advancement, rather than a transactional supply of assistance.
We advocate for children and community development one household at a time.
To see generations of empowered children lead community change and share their passions with the world.
We believe the key to lasting success is to foster strong relationships that build trust and confidence. We seek relationships with each other, with God, and creation.
We are built by and for the community in which we operate; 100% of our operational staff are Ugandan nationals.
We share the goal of collective success, which can only be accomplished through teamwork and collaboration.
We believe that age, gender, tribe, faith or history should not exclude you from access to opportunity. Everyone should have a seat at the table.
The knowledge, skills, and confidence acquired through community-wide engagement has the ability to lead change for generations to come.
We aim to combat common misconceptions surrounding poverty by telling stories that highlight initiative, resilience, and achievement. We take into consideration the historical context and contemporary challenges faced by our community.
We offer both formal education and vocational training to encourage students and community members to recognize their own unique skill sets and abilities.
Our programs are designed to strengthen individual and communal capacities to encourage growth that leads to economic self-sufficiency.
What started as a simple campaign to complete a church building in a small Ugandan village of Lusaka, has become a life-changing partnership for the people of rural Uganda and friends of Raise the Roof Academy.
In November 2005, David and Marlene Ssebulime launched the first campaign dubbed “Raise the Roof” and after 7 months of hosting various fundraisers, and offering many prayers, embarked on a journey to the Ugandan village of Lusaka to present the funds for the first roof. On this journey, their eyes were opened to a mission of forging relationships that foster stability, hope, and transformation.
In August 2008, after a few years of raising roofs and supporting other community projects, David and Marlene Ssebulime visited the village of Bwasandeku. Known to be an area rife with HIV/AIDS and alcoholism, and deemed “Home of Alcoholism” by regional leaders. Bwasandeku was a village that needed intervention. Children were not going to school, people were still dying from HIV/AIDS, children were under the care of elderly grandparents, and the majority of the men had resigned to alcohol.
David and Marlene Ssebulime knew God had brought them there for a reason. The school doors opened in the beginning of 2011 with 30 children in a wood-shed structure. They introduced friends and family to the children and asked that they become their champions and sponsors. As soon as the first 30 children were sponsored, 30 more children were added to the program, then 60 children. RTRA now has over 1,300 students in its schools and the team continues to advocate for children and community development one household at a time.