Our Program
Bataxal is a Jamarek program dedicated at promoting and helping African artists, By helping them continuing their education in the US, present and sell their products in the US. Producing recreational, artistic, entertainment and social events. Marketing African music, art, clothing, and other merchandise
- To provide an opportunity for African Artist to study related to their cultural background, with a special emphasis on broadening the educational opportunities for young people, children, women and to thus preserve the rich musical heritage of Africa
- To promote professional excellence among African Artist s through training, seminars, workshops, debates …
- To give skills and resources to a group of talented young people so that they can make a living from Art
- The Xel-Xeeli students explaining the first rough draft for the wheelchair
- Maurice Mlozi in the foreground, as the students experiment with battery configurations and a micrometer
- Joel and Wakisa learning how to blink an LED using an Arduino
The Beginning of Xel-Xeeli in Malawi
Xel-Xeeli has brought together 10 Malawian high school juniors (form 3) to support one of their fellow classmates in the most profound way. The Xel-Xeeli Malawi has been working diligently to create a wheelchair for one of their fellow underclassmen. Chipasula Secondary School is one of the best high schools in Lilongwe, the capital of Malawi. Naturally everyone wants to get into the school.
One Chipasula student, a freshman (form 1) chose Chipasula, and has been fighting for education despite his situation. This student is disabled; forced to walk on his hands and knees. But he was admitted to Chipasula and he wanted to go there, even though it was more than 10km away from his home. People instructed him to go to another school, but he said, “Chipasula is the only one for me”. Trying to be accepted onto public transport is a daily struggle because of the stigma of a wheelchair. The school community, including the group of juniors, raised money to buy a bicycle so that someone could take him to school. But even this generosity has difficulties, because the student must still find his way back home at the end of the day and sometimes, the person who transports him doesn’t come. To cut to the root of the problem, his parents have rejected him, and he lives with his aunt.
Wakisa Mwakatika, one of the juniors going to Chipasula, was connected to Joel Chimwemwe Nitz, a University of Wisconsin-Madison biomedical engineer student, during the summer of 2022. Joel had just been connected with the founder of Xel-Xeeli Alassane Jamb that same summer, and the founder gave electronics kits and laptops to take to Malawi during Joel’s internship. Joel met with Wakisa on the weekend for 2-3 hours for many weeks doing simple Arduino electronics projects and learning how to code in Scratch.