Medicine Hat News

WE Charity had multiple ‘opening’ ceremonies for Kenya school, former donor says

- JACOB SEREBRIN

A man who once sat on the advisory board to WE Charity’s American affiliate told a parliament­ary committee he believes two different groups of donors were told they’d raised the money for the same school building in Kenya.

Reed Cowan testified on Friday that he started raising money for Free The Children, as WE Charity was known at the time, after his son Wesley died in an accident at age four.

He said he wanted to give Wesley a legacy and turn his

“pain into purpose,” but now feels like his son’s grave has been robbed.

He said he discovered that a plaque on a school building that once bore Wesley’s name now carries the name of another WE donor.

“I saw that the school that we had opened and put our plaque on with Wesley’s name and his motto was no longer on his school,” Cowan said.

One of the names now on the plaque is the Howie Stillman Foundation, he said.

On the foundation’s website, he found a video of an “opening celebratio­n, where they opened the very same building less than two weeks before we arrived there. We went to Kenya thinking we were opening that building for Wesley,” he said. “The ceremony was re-cued for us, same people, same songs, same everything, different plaques.”

For Cowan, knowing he’d build a specific school was important. He said he was told by Roxanne Joyal, the wife of WE founder Marc Kielburger and the current CEO of its for-profit affiliate ME to WE, that the school was “Wesley’s school.”

“When you give money to an organizati­on a continent away, you wonder if it’s real, and then I put my hands on the brick and it is,” he told the committee.

He said thinking about children in Kenya studying at the school helps him deal with the loss of his son. It “gets me through a lot of nights,” Cowan told the committee.

Money raised by Cowan’s group, the Wesley Smiles Coalition, went directly to WE Charity.

He said he believes it raised hundreds of thousands of dollars directly and that his efforts for the organizati­ons, including speaking across the U.S., may have helped raise millions of dollars.

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