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Streetwise Abantu: Rehabilitation through art
Culture
Fund
June 04, 2009
Streetwise Abantu is
a unique project that is rehabilitating those stigmatised in society,
that is the mentally challenged, homeless and destitute and those
affected by HIV and AIDS.
The project instils technical
skills and provides entrepreneurial and professional skills hence
capacitating the individuals to produce crafts for sale locally
and internationally.
The project
was started in a bid to bridge the gap left by the Streets
Ahead programme which caters for the same criteria but only
for those below the age of eighteen.
Streetwise Abantu Workshops
operate from Harare Hospital Psychiatric Unit and the organisation
is headquartered in Milton Park, Harare.
Counselling for members
undergoing rehabilitation is provided at the workplace and both
rehab technocratic and department heads continue to monitor the
process.
All members in the workshops
receive medication provided with assistance from Streetwise. There
are three departments in the workshop; the papermaking department,
the product-designing department and the wire craft department.
The workshops are all
run by department heads under the workshop manager's supervision
who ensures good product quality and control.
These products are fashioned
in professional manner and grace the shelves of some of the bookshops
and arts shops in the city. The products have been well received
on the export market.
Streetwise Abantu rent
a farmhouse in Tynwald where accommodation is offered to members
of the Streetwise family.
The farmhouse where some
of the members live is community based thus providing a home for
them.
The set up is such that
each individual caters for their own needs and is provided with
their own room, but at the same time they have a community feel
as they work in the fields together and are housed in the farmhouse
together.
Along with this, the
individuals in the programme are provided with a small stipend that
they administer on their own. This is done to instill a sense of
responsibility as a way of preparing them for reintegration into
society.
The Culture Fund of Zimbabwe
Trust last year commissioned the organisation to design and produce
its batch of Christmas cards. This was in a bid to support culturally
unique products that will make a positive impact in society.
This is a project that
is quite outstanding as it is working within the arts sector and
making positive changes to the community at large by assisting those
that are otherwise shunned or stigmatised.
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