|
Back to Index
Despair
hits parents of children with disabilities
National
Association of Societies for the Care of the Handicapped (NASCOH)
October 08, 2007
The current water woes
and worsening economic climate have resulted in untold hardships
for a group of women with children with disabilities in Sunningdale,
who no longer have any source of income after their sewing machine
broke down four months ago and whose gardening venture is no longer
possible because of unavailability of water to water their gardens.
The women, who
belong to the Sunningdale Tinokunda Group of the Zimbabwe
Parents of Handicapped Children (ZPHCA) used to cater for their
upkeep and for that of their children through proceeeds from selling
t-shirts, shorts and dresses that they would have sewn using a sewing
machine that had been loaned to them by Sunningdale Community Centre.
Four months ago, however, the sewing machine broke down, and the
women, most of whom have been deserted by their husbands, are failing
to make ends meet because they have been forced to discontinue the
sewing project.
To compound the situation,
the women used to run a thriving gardening project which provided
them with much-needed relish to feed their children. The current
water woes, however, have forced the women to discontinue the project
and this has robbed them of an invaluable source of food. The food
that is prescribed for their children by the doctors is also very
expensive and hard to get.
Although the women still
meet every Tuesday and Thursday at the Sunningdale Community Centre
with their children to give each other advice on self-help projects
and on how to care for their children, they are beginning to feel
that these meetings are a futile exercise.
"The mothers are
despairing. You can't just come and meet when there is nothing
to do. We desperately need our own sewing machine and a regular
supply of water in order to get our income generating projects going,"
says Mrs Memory Namarave, the Chairperson of the Sunningdale Tinokunda
group of ZAPHCA.
The mothers also said
that they wanted a centre of their own, like the one in Glen View,
where their children can live and sleep and the parents can be free
to go for employment and then come back to their children. They
would also be able to take turns to look after the children. Other
people do not want to look after their children and the ever-present
queues for virtually every commodity are also a considerable concern
for the women, as they cant't stand in the queues but have
to buy quickly and rush to look after the children.
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
|