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In informellen Siedlungen in Südafrika fehlt es an allem. Mit einem neuen Gemeinschaftszentrum unterstützt SolidarMed dort HIV-betroffene Kinder und Jugendliche, damit sie eine Chance auf eine bessere Zukunft haben. Auch ihre Eltern profitieren davon.

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Informelle Siedlung in der Umgebung von East London, Südafrika
2021_Illitha_Martin Ramsauer
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Informelle Siedlung in der Umgebung von East London, Südafrika
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In der informellen Siedlung Gonubie Farmers Hall gibt es weder Strom noch fliessendes Wasser. Das schadet der Gesundheit der Kinder.
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alleinerziehende Mutter mit Kindern in Südafrika
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Die alleinerziehende Mutter Kuti Malawu lebt mit ihren Kindern seit mehreren Jahren in Gonubie Farmers Hall.
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Hoffnung gibt das neue Gemeinschaftszentrum von SolidarMed und ihrer lokalen Partnerorganisation Jika Uluntu. Es beinhaltet eine Kinderkrippe, einen grossen Spielplatz, ein Schulzimmer mit Computern, eine Küche und ein Büro. Martin Ramsauer
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Kinder sind hier gut betreut. Sie erhalten ein Mittagessen, können draussen spielen und an diversen Kursen teilnehmen. Schulkinder erhalten Unterstützung bei den Hausaufgaben und können an Lernprogrammen und Gruppenkursen teilnehmen. Martin Ramsauer
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Bereits Primarschüler:innen erhalten sehr viele Hausaufgaben, doch ihren Eltern fehlt meist die Zeit oder das Wissen, um sie zu unterstützen. Im Gemeinschaftszentrum erhalten die Kinder Aufgabenhilfe und werden individuell gefördert. Martin Ramsauer
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Trotz Aufwachsen unter schwierigen Umständen haben die Kinder der informellen Siedlung dank dem neuen Gemeinschaftszentrum eine Chance auf eine bessere Zukunft. Martin Ramsauer
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Gonoubie Farmers Hall is an informal settlement close to the port of East London. It has no electricity or running water, which is harmful to children's health.
Single mother Kuti Malawu has lived with her children Mpho and Anga in Gonoubie Farmers Hall for several years.
The new community center of SolidarMed and its local partner organization Jika Uluntu is a source of hope. It houses a nursery, a large playground, a classroom with computers, a kitchen and an office.
Children are well cared for there. They receive lunch, can play outside and participate in various courses. School children receive assistance with homework and can participate in learning programs and group courses.
Even in primary school, children get a a lot of homework but many parents are lacking the ability or the knowledge to help their children. At the community center, children receive one-to-one support with their learning.
Despite growing up under difficult circumstances, the children of the informal settlement have a chance for a better future thanks to the new community center.
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Gonubie Farmers Hall, close to the port of East London, is an informal settlement. It consists of makeshift houses built between a few trees next to a motorway. Some 900 people live here. The houses are built out of wood, corrugated iron and cardboard. Built-in windows let light into the small living quarters.

Very few residents have running water, a toilet or electricity. Because as the settlement does not officially exist, the authorities barely bother about it. A truck brings drinking water just once a week, and occasionally a mobile clinic stops by to provide people with minimal access to healthcare.

Children who grow up here are directly affected by the difficult conditions in the settlement, their parents’ poverty and a lack of prospects. Until recently, there were no supervised leisure facilities, nowhere to go for help with homework and nobody who had time for them.

Glimmers of hope for the next generation

All that has changed. A new community centre was built around a year ago within walking distance of the informal settlement. It houses a nursery, a large playground, a classroom with computers, a kitchen and an office. Besides children from the informal settlement, children and young people from surrounding villages also come to the community centre. They get lunch, receive help with homework and can take part in learning programmes and group courses.

This also includes age-appropriate education on HIV/AIDS because in this region of South Africa, too, many people are HIV positive – often without even knowing it. It is therefore particularly important to sensitise children to the issue early on. They are also tested for HIV and receive medical treatment if necessary.

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Kinder machen Matheaufgaben
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«Im Gemeinschaftszentrum werden die Kinder beim Lernen individuell unterstützt, das stärkt ihr Selbstvertrauen und macht Spass», sagt Emma Rutherford. Sie ist Geschäftsleiterin von Jika Uluntu, der lokalen Partnerorganisation von SolidarMed, welche das Projekt umsetzt. Martin Ramsauer
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“At the community centre, children receive one-to-one support with their learning. This boosts their self-confidence and is fun,” says Emma Rutherford. She is the director of Jika Uluntu, which is implementing the the project.
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The community centre has really struck a chord. “The need for support with homework in particular is huge,” explains Emma Rutherford. She is the director of Jika Uluntu, SolidarMed’s local partner organisation, which is implementing the project. “Even in primary school, children get a lot of homework but many parents are lacking the ability or the knowledge to help their children.  At the community centre, children receive one-to-one support with their learning. This boosts their self-confidence and is fun,” says Emma Rutherford.

Parents benefit too

She goes on to say that the centre in general is a huge relief for parents: “they have the peace of mind that their children are in safe hands after school and are doing their homework. Otherwise, many would be left to their own devices while their parents work or look for work.”

Crucial to the children’s physical and mental wellbeing is also the situation of their caregivers. SolidarMed therefore also delivers targeted support to adults. In the informal settlement Gonubie Farmers Hall and in the immediate surroundings, social workers regularly visit some 130 households. They advise adults about health, parenting and looking for work. They also help them fill out and submit documents, for example to apply for child benefit from the government.

This also helps the physical and psychological well-being of the children. Thus, despite difficult circumstances, they have a chance for a better future.

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Read the whole article in Focus 22/1.

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Read more about our projects in South Africa
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