| |
Back to Index
Jairos
Jiri Association - a beacon of hope for the disability sector
National
Association of Societies for the Care of the Handicapped (NASCOH)
Extracted from Disability Update,
Sept 29 - Oct 06, 2006
October 02, 2006
In an era where
stigmatisation and discrimination against people with disabilities
is often carried to unprecedented levels, Jairos Jiri Association,
arguably the best-known disability organisation in Zimbabwe, stands
out as a pillar of strength and a beacon of hope and inspiration
to the disability sector. Not only is it the largest service provider
to people with disabilities, with over 14 500 clients being served
annually through outreach and follow-up integration programmes:
it has achieved the rare feat of being able to provide over 37%
of its current operational budget of $142million from its factories,
craft shops, goodwill shops, farms and fundraising activities. This
achievement attests to the grossly overlooked ability of people
with disabilities to perform impressively in various fields of endeavour
if given the opportunity.
A model of diversity,
empowerment and integration, the association runs 16 centres where
over 1200 children and adults receive treatment, care, skills training
and education. In the area of education and training, the association’s
Bulawayo Centre offers training in 9 areas of trade and business
skills, catering for 132 adults, while 30 students are benefiting
from attending a two-year course in Subsistence and Commercial Agriculture
which is offered at the Masvingo Centre. Kadoma School for the Blind
provides primary education for 123 students, while Harare Centre
currently caters for the educational needs of 217 pre-school to
grade 7 children with severe physical disabilities. Gweru School
for the Dead provides pre-school to grade 7 education including
vocational courses in tailoring, carpentry and agriculture to 250
students while Waterfalls Centre provides pre-school education and
physiotherapy treatment to 42 young children suffering from cerebral
palsy. In addition, 100 children are currently benefiting from the
Jairos Jiri Scholarship programme, which assists secondary and post
secondary students attending schools and colleges in Zimbabwe.
Income generating
projects are run at the Bulawayo and Zimunya Factory and Sawmill
in Mutare. High quality furniture is produced at these establishments,
which also provide training and employment to 52 persons with disabilities
in woodwork, metal work and leather craft. Burnside, Gwanda and
Gleneagles cater for a wide range of agricultural production including
poultry, animal husbandry, dry land farming, flood irrigation, and
horticultural production. Together, the two provide gainful employment
to 9 ex-trainees of the association with disabilities. In addition,
Jairos Jiri craft shops in Harare, Bulawayo, Victoria Falls and
Mutare offer a large variety of local and traditional wares to the
public and also to tourists. Quality clothing is available to the
public at Goodwill store in Bulawayo.
Jairos Jiri
has also made tremendous impact in the Community Based Rehabilitation
(CBR) Programme, which offers identification, referral and support
services to over 4 300 people with disabilities in their home areas,
while income generating projects initiated by CBR clients, which
employ over 400 people, receive administrative, financial and material
support until they achieve self-sufficiency. The Orthopaedic Workshop
in Harare provides artificial limbs and assistive appliances for
the association’s clients and the general public.
The Rusape Centre
and Pumula Hostel provide accessible accommodation and motherly
care to 97 people with physical and visual impairments who are integrated
into nearby ordinary primary and secondary schools for educational
purposes.
Lobby and advocacy
programmes to raise public awareness of the rights and opportunities
to empower people with disabilities throughout Zimbabwe to enable
them to take their rightful place as independent and productive
citizens are an ongoing activity. Gender, literacy and HIV\AIDS
awareness programmes complement the advocacy efforts.
Visit the NASCOH
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
|