Blog
There is always something going on in the City of UBUNTU. On our blog, we keep you up to date on what’s happening with our teams in Cameroon and Austria.

Teaching Living Languages: City of Ubuntu Cameroon Is Looking for You
A new educational programme is opening its doors in Cameroon — and it needs passionate people ready to pass on the living heritage of African languages and cultures to the next generation.

Let’s Talk Ubuntu: An Evening of Exchange and Reflection
Ubuntu Day in october 2025 was a celebration of shared values, global connection, and local community. Now we want to continue the conversation at Weltladen “Die Lerche” Josefstadt in Vienna

Let’s Talk Ubuntu: Join Us on March 19th in Vienna
Ubuntu Day in october 2025 was a celebration of shared values, global connection, and local community. Now we want to continue the conversation at Weltladen “Die Lerche” Josefstadt in Vienna

Learning Ubuntu by Building the Future: A School Project That Inspired Us All
How do children imagine a City of Ubuntu?
Students aged 10–12 at Mittelschule Klosterneuburg explored this question by designing and building three model cities of encounter and cooperation. Their creativity, thoughtfulness, and sense of community left us deeply inspired—and reminded us that Ubuntu is already alive in the next generation.

Birth certificates for Sanki children
Water is now flowing in City of Ubuntu Sanki, and we are delighted!
On November 30, 2025, two teams worked hard in City of Ubuntu to install the solar-powered automatic irrigation system. The first team, led by Simo Boris, took care of installing the solar panels and the pump. The second team, led by Romarick Nguepi, installed the 5,000-liter tank at a height to receive water from the borehole and redistribute it to various parts of the land.

Field Update #31
Water is now flowing in City of Ubuntu Sanki, and we are delighted!
On November 30, 2025, two teams worked hard in City of Ubuntu to install the solar-powered automatic irrigation system. The first team, led by Simo Boris, took care of installing the solar panels and the pump. The second team, led by Romarick Nguepi, installed the 5,000-liter tank at a height to receive water from the borehole and redistribute it to various parts of the land.