 Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Realtalk. I am your host, Iwunyaga. So money is not the easiest thing to come by, and it's twice as hard if you need that money for charities. So you need to be very creative in the ways that you used to fundraise for the charities. And Navifu Foundations have come up with a very creative way of raising their funds, and they do it through high fashion events. You can be part of this conversation by sending in your comments, questions, or telling us where you're watching us from on e-circuit across all our social media platforms. You can also get in touch with me at Iwunyaga on Instagram and Twitter, and Iwunyaga on Facebook. My guest today goes by the name Bill Hamorezi, and she's the founder of Navifu Foundations, which is a charity organisation that gives sanitary towels and boxes to young boys and girls. So she'll be telling us more about the foundation and the high fashion events and everything we need to know. So welcome. Thank you very much. So first of all, we'd like to know as much as I've introduced you, Tambia Majinayako, and what you do professionally. I'm Bill Hamorezi, and we have a foundation in Jujja. We are calling Navifu Foundation. Basically what we do is empower women. We started as an empowerment organisation for women, and we would give vocational skills. The reason being is because most people today are just complaining about kuna kazi ha kuna kazi. There are so many opportunities out there. And again, what we are looking for is employment. So I'm Navifu, we believe that in vocational skills, there are opportunities there. So the skills we give are something like branding, there is detergent, there is beadwork, and then there is sandal making. Something that a woman can be able to do when she is at her comfort of her home as they are still looking for taking care of their children. But of late, we had issues with fundraising. And then again we felt that we are also having these women, once they have their products ready for the market, we still are not able to outsource the market. So we ended up having a program where we had models come in and we have organised a number of pageants. The challenge was we were crowning a model telling her, you are the queen, go around the world. But this girl doesn't have funding, network or even the awareness of how we can do community projects. So for that we just did cut the program and then we started something for going, we felt that the most easiest thing for these girls is going to school and mentoring children because nambawa and at least wame pita hapo. You know you can't be able, I'm a mother of two. So I can be able to sit with a mum and at least tell her these are the challenges that I'm facing. But then for a girl telling her to go mentor someone who maybe is above her, it's hard. So we felt that the best way for models program is in primary schools. So we go to primary school, give sanitary to girls and boys we give boxers. And our intention was not to reach out to their mothers and then give them these skills. But after going to these schools, right now we have gone to six schools. And after going to these schools we started finding that these children, most parents are earning something like 250 a day and you can imagine that this parent has like three children. So that is jidogo mani, honestly. So you were like, how do we handle this? At time you just go to this school and mtoto ana collapse, and they're like, hanga. So you're like, can we first buy milk and something because you can't give someone sanitary or box ana konanja. So you were like, how are we now able to address this? Then you were like, why not these skills we want to give these women, why not give these skills to the children?