| |
Back to Index
Kufunda Celebration
Marianne
Knuth, Kufunda Learning Village
July 07, 2003
Dear Friends,
Yesterday was
a day of celebration and appreciation. Our second group of Kufundees
completed the three month leadership and self-reliance
programme.
'Leadership
and self-reliance programme,' that description does not quite seem
to capture the journey we went on together, and how we arrived at
the end of it changed.
"At Kufunda
I learned to use hands as hands in stone sculpting, permaculture,
batik and sandal making. It made me realise that our hands are
useful in creating our own employment. I had the opportunity to
learn the wisdom of our African treasures, and truly Kufunda was
an eye opener to me in terms of seeing life with a new vision.
The idea that we never came here to Kufunda to learn a pre-stated
set of Kufunda text-books made me understand that we have to explore
ourselves deeply in trying to search for the useful resources,
talents and skills we possess. I had the opportunity of exploring
my inner talents and I discovered that I had plenty to offer to
the world. One more thing I learned is that if we co-operate and
live in a healthy environment we achieve whatever we embark on
with the best results."
- Munyaradzi Toto, 26 years, Rusape
I continue to
be humbled by the power of simply creating a space where love and
learning and a spirit of service can co-exist. We didn't change
these people, we didn't ignite the spark in them that shone so clearly
yesterday during our closing celebrations, yet we created the conditions
for the change to occur, and for a spark to ignite their own light
and hope and power.
Let me tell
a few stories of sparks:
- Ernest is
a young man without an education, who for years has worked as
a security guard, which is equivalent here mostly to being under-employed.
You work full time, yet you never make enough money to save any;
simply to just scrape by. Here over the past three months he discovered
a real talent for stone sculpting. He truly has a gift for it.
He is going to continue working with it, developing it, and hopefully
sell some of his pieces to Friends of Kufunda abroad (I sold a
small piece of his for 20 USD, which is more than a monthly salary
as a security guard). However, it is not simply that he has found
a way of making a living - his discovery of a talent, a real gift
- and the recognition he got from the community of Kufundees -
has gradually transformed this young man - adding confidence,
hope, optimism, and self-worth to who he is.
- Munyaradzi
completed his O levels (11th year of schooling) and did well in
them. He is an incredibly bright young man, a gifted farmer (and
recently also acknowledged his gift as a poet). He never found
employment in the city and so chose to return to his rural area
and simply work on the land. He always felt that he was a bit
of a failure for doing so. At Kufunda he connected strongly to
the ideas and ideals we worked through surrounding community as
well as sustainability (permaculture), recognising a very real
need for both to be strengthened back home (currently many farmers
can't afford to buy their needed fertilisers and pesticides, and
no longer know the traditional organic ways). And so he shifted
his perspective of himself as a failure and became real passionate
around returning home with an important role to play in his community.
He is going home to create a model permaculture garden, moving
from conventional agriculture to sustainable agriculture, and
wanting to create a permaculture 'club,' or network, in his community
to work with others to experiment with and implement sustainable
methods of farming, hopefully spreading the knowledge and desire
for this across his community.
- Wadzanai
also completed her O levels but found herself sitting at home,
not being able to find work, and feeling sad to still be dependent
on her parents but not knowing what to do about it. Yesterday
she shared how she was leaving Kufunda with hope and excitement.
She had learned that employment wasn't the only way to make a
living, or live a worthwhile life, and she is now going home to
make and sell candles. Initially just on her own, but she wants
to invite friends to join her - and intends to teach them what
she has learned here, so that they too can move from unemployment
to self-employment.
And so it goes
- for each of the students there is a story to be told around the
shift that they went through as they discovered their own talents,
potential as well as the potential, wealth and joy present in learning
to live in community. Almost all of them wish to share their learning,
and bring this real and grounded sense of the possible to others.
And all of them expressed their gratitude to all of you in near
and distant places that have supported us with your love, money,
presence, prayers and more. Thank you all.
* TAKING OUR
WORK INTO THE COMMUNITIES*
We will shortly be embarking on a new initiative through which some
of the Kufundees that have passed through our programmes will be
supported by Kufunda to act as resource persons in their community,
sharing their learning (both practical and intangible) and organising
community dialogues and gatherings to enhance community collaboration.
We are hoping to develop a strong network of committed people who
play an active role in being the 'glue' of their communities, bringing
people closer together, engaged in mutual learning and shared community
initiatives. We will share more on this as it moves ahead. It suffices
to say that we - and the first Kufundees to step into this - are
very excited by its potential.
Let me end with
some more words by Munyaradzi, our poet and farmer, who expressed
his learning over the last months around the important link between
individual, community and purpose..
"Community
exists in part to safeguard the purpose of each person within
it and to awaken the memory of that purpose by recognising the
unique gifts each individual brings to the world. A person with
his/her unique gifts is irreplaceable. The community loves to
see all of its members flourish and function at optimum potential.
In fact a community can flourish and survive only when each member
flourishes living in the full potential of his/her purpose."
- Munyaradzi Toto
About Kufunda:
On a farm outside Harare, Zimbabwe - we are a small group of people
who have created a learning village aimed at the creation of locally
rooted solutions to community self-reliance challenges. Kufunda
seeks to bring together individuals from different rural and high-density
communities in Zimbabwe to explore the possibilities of individual
and community self-sufficiency. We believe that there is tremendous
untapped potential in the energy, wisdom and knowledge of people.
Our programs are designed to nurture that potential so that innovative
solutions can emerge and be made manifest.
Come visit us
at www.kufunda.org
For more information, email Marianne at marianne@kufunda.org
Visit the Kufunda
Learning Village fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|