UMZI WETHU VILLAGES FOR
DISPLACED CHILDREN IN SOUTH AFRICA
THE UMZI WETHU APPROACH IN SOUTH AFRICA
WF will harness the opportunity offered by
ecotourism growth and invite OVCs aged 13-18 in urban areas
to join the uMzi wethu training and educational program in
sponsored residential secondary schools placed outside game
reserves. The uMzi wethu strategy is both simple and
effective, combining the warmth and guidance of a lasting
family relationship, the strength of traditional culture,
the liberation of education and job skills training, and the
energy of unfolding environmental awareness and commitment.
An
uMzi wethu is a school with a residential option designed to
get displaced and at risk children through their schooling
in a safe and nurturing environment while also preparing
them to be productive and successful in life. uMzi wethu
targets those orphans who have no family and no options for
placement – those most at risk of being lost to society. It
provides a family environment with caretakers from the
community and mentor-elders supplanting the fundamental
parental role and relationship conveying local culture,
respect for life, and values like honesty and compassion. It
also teaches concepts such as reproductive health, gender
equity, and the value of wild nature. Counseling will
address psychological wounds incurred with death in the
family and low self-esteem wrought by the stigma of
HIV/AIDS. UMzi wethu will also help children become peer
mentors of new arrivals and others needing special
attention.
The uMzi wethu will be centered in the community. WF will
partner with local community-based organizations and
community care coalitions to mobilize their experience,
knowledge and human resources for the benefit of each uMzi
wethu. OVCs will receive their basic conventional education
at local farm schools and access health care at the local
clinic. In turn, the uMzi wethu brand and network will
leverage resources such as computers for the schools and
medicines for the clinic, thereby increasing the capacity of
the community to serve OVCs.
WF
has a long history with South Africa’s large, progressive
network of game parks and wilderness areas. It can thus
negotiate the establishment of children’s villages attached
to these parks – using park infrastructure and modern
building techniques. The nature and game reserve will
“adopt” and play a mentoring role in the development of the
uMzi wethu and its children, providing internships with
hands-on opportunities to learn and practice skills in the
field as well as in the classroom. Experiences in the
surrounding natural areas, such as guiding and tracking in
the game reserve, will instill a sense of personal
responsibility while generating leadership and environmental
management skills. The uMzi wethu will then help place its
student participants in jobs with the nature and game
reserve or elsewhere upon graduation.
The goal of uMzi wethu is to turn a displaced generation of
the AIDS pandemic into leaders of a better future for South
Africa. In place of disaffected and stigmatized youth, uMzi
wethu will nurture young people with hope, confidence,
vision and skills, who are also aware of the critical need
for wildlife and natural resource protection and are
custodians of their environment and society and potential
conservation leaders. Four criteria guide uMzi wethu
implementation, in accordance with the principles of the UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child. uMzi wethu will:
- account for the best interests of the child in all
matters, including admission and release;
- give each child the opportunity to participate in
decisions about placement and in program evaluation;
- adopt a no-tolerance policy toward abuse by staff;
- identify and address discrimination caused by the
stigma of AIDS and of being an orphan; and
- allow and support all children in developing their
full potential.
uMzi wethu has six specific project objectives:--
(1) Provide a home environment away from the negative
influences of urban centers (drugs, gangs and crime) in a
safe rural setting, with the care and guidance of surrogate
families in order to avert problem behavior and nurture
self-esteem, integrity, and a positive outlook.
(2) Meet basic nutritional and healthcare needs, provide the
life skills training that allows youths to care for others,
and offer reproductive health education – all of which
enhance the ability of OVCs to learn, function as productive
adults, and avoid high-risk behavior.
(3) Give each participant the opportunity to earn a grade 12
qualification (South African equivalent of a high school
diploma) – the core requirement for a job in ecotourism or
any other industry – and gain the specialty job skills and
field experience that give them an advantage.
(4) Prepare each participant for productive employment and
life beyond uMzi wethu. Support job placement of
participants upon graduation from uMzi wethu, and retain a
guidance role.
(5) Teach OVCs to value and benefit from nature through the
experiential education opportunities of the WF Imbewu
program and traditional knowledge imparted by elders, and by
the uMzi wethu’s relationship with the neighboring game
reserve or park.
(6) Monitor and evaluate the advancement of children from
entry through adulthood by way of assessments of
psychological and physical well being, performance per
national education standards, job success and participatory
program evaluation measures.
uMzi wethu will be carried out in three phases: (1)
feasibility study; (2) launch of pilots; and (3) rollout. It
will rely on WILD’s support during planning and
implementation, and has established a special office in the
Washington, D.C. area to ensure uMzi wethu maintains the
relationships with U.S. government officials, foundations,
partners and others necessary to maximizing diplomatic
support, funding, and publicity of the concept as it evolves
to meet its potential.
Phase one (July 2004 – September 2005) involves outreach,
coalition building, and planning as well as development,
networking, and publicity activities. The project will
acquire the input of a wide variety of experts and conduct a
detailed feasibility study, which will result in the
establishment of the first two villages in the Eastern Cape
region of South Africa (Phase 2). Various working groups,
training and evaluation teams will be put in place.
Both WF and WILD have endorsed the Code of Good Practice for
NGOs Responding to HIV/AIDS, administered via the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies. In the feasibility study stage, WF plans to
ensure questions of HIV prevention, treatment, care and
support, stigma and discrimination, impact mitigation, and
up scaling are related to uMzi wethu and addressed.
Phase two (October 2005 – December 2007) involves staff
training followed by building and establishing the first two
villages. These pilot villages will be situated in the
Eastern Cape and KwaZulu Natal regions of South Africa on
the boundary of two private game reserves. These will play a
training and oversight role in the logistical management of
the land and infrastructure. Initial intake will be 100-200
displaced children, selected through existing community
programs in the towns who will recommend youth who require
uMzi wethu support.
Phase three (2008-2014) involves the continuous rollout of uMzi wethu villages with government and private financial
support. These villages will link up with existing
environmental and wildlife training programs to become the
core training centers staffing many of Southern Africa’s
national, provincial and private game reserves and
environmental projects. The success of the two uMzi wethu
pilots will prove the concept works and enable WF to make
the case to the SA government for using former agriculture
and police training colleges – built during apartheid to get
whites back on the land and today about half stand empty –
for uMzi wethu, making the rollout phase especially
cost-effective. About 70% of the initial cost of an uMzi
wethu is the infrastructure.
Monitoring and evaluation will be instituted for uMzi wethu
at the feasibility study stage of project development.
Methods and criteria for measuring performance will likely
emulate the monitoring and evaluation framework and
performance goals and indicators of the U.S. Government
(proposed USAID Office for Orphans and Other Vulnerable
Children), UNICEF and UNAIDS, and the Code. In addition, the
World Wilderness Congress – the longest running, global
public environmental forum – will provide a venue for
dissemination of results and feedback from an expert
international audience throughout the various stages of uMzi
wethu implementation. The next Congress will be held
September 30-October 5, 2005, in Anchorage, Alaska. It will
use uMzi wethu to demonstrate how applying environmental
values to social needs can result in effectively integrated
benefits to both nature and human society, and use the
platform of the Congress to achieve visibility.
CONCLUSION
The uMzi wethu concept has broad support. uMzi wethu
is endorsed formally by the International
Conservation Caucus, a bi-partisan group of 54 U.S.
Congressmen. WF and WILD have briefed the U.S.
Ambassador to South Africa, Assistant Secretary of
State, and Chief Medical Officer of the U.S. Global
AIDS Office. uMzi wethu is endorsed by the South
African Human Sciences Research Council and the
South Africa Conservation Group and various AIDS
non-governmental organizations. WF is also
recruiting partners, such as Global Fund for
Children and the Ubuntu community-based AIDS
programs, to advise the project.
Because of the rapid growth of the AIDS epidemic,
uMzi wethu pilots need to be in place within 9-12
months. AIDS orphans in South Africa are socially
and economically disadvantaged, and at great risk. A
feasibility study must be undertaken immediately to
create a blueprint for the pilot uMzi wethu –
cost-effective, results-oriented, and geared for
replication within two years.
By 2010, one in four children will suffer the same
fate in Botswana, Malawi, Uganda, Zambia and
Zimbabwe. Assistant Secretary of State for Oceans
and International Environmental and
Scientific Affairs, John Turner, recently commented
that uMzi wethu “will create a model that the whole
world can use.”
We believe that over the next decade we can create
an entirely new concept in education and care of
those affected by the AIDS pandemic. With full
national and international backing we will provide a
hopeful and productive life for up to a million
children. This would be only the beginning.
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Angola
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Chad
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India
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Mali
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Namibia
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South Africa
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Uganda
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West Africa
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New Projects
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Training
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ABOUT THE WILDERNESS FOUNDATION AND THE WILD
FOUNDATION:
The designers – The people putting the concept
together are: Andrew Muir, who heads the Wilderness
Foundation and is one of South Africa’s recognized
leaders who works from the townships to the game
reserves, designing and delivering programs with
effective social and environmental results; and Dr.
Don Pinnock, who is a criminologist by training, a
gang specialist, and one of the country’s foremost
environmental and travel writers. He designed the
Usiko rights of passage program for youth people at
risk and was one of the key drafters of the Youth
Justice legislation.
The Wilderness Foundation is a non-profit NGO
founded in 1972 by renowned international
conservationist Dr. Ian Player and the late Magqubu
Ntombela, a Zulu tribal chief and renowned game
ranger in Zululand parks for 50 years. WF pioneered
using wilderness and wild lands as a positive force
for social change in South Africa by bringing
historically disadvantaged youth, as well as
political and community leaders, on trail to
experience wild nature, rediscover cultural identity
and build self-esteem and leadership skills. Since
its inception more than 45,000 participants have
been through its programs.
Under the leadership of Andrew Muir, WF’s
entry-level program, Imbewu (“the seed”), has
successfully mentored and trained 9,000 mostly black
youth in the past six years. The program revolves
around wise black wise elders who provide cultural
and environmental mentoring on courses in the heart
of the most pristine and wild national parks. Its
success has led to rollout in other African
countries, and it will now be redesigned and applied
to uMzi wethu.
The WILD Foundation is a 501(c)(3) organization
headquartered in Ojai, California, that was founded
by Dr. Player in 1974. WILD works internationally to
protect and sustain wilderness and wild land areas,
endangered wildlife, and human communities. WILD has
always worked to address the needs of indigenous
people through wilderness conservation programs and
models. In 1977, WILD founded the World Wilderness
Congress, and under the leadership of president
Vance Martin, manages this results-oriented
international project that hosts a global public
forum occurring every 3-4 years around the world. It
is designed to make a case for wilderness protection
based on biological, economic, and social benefits.
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