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ZIMBABWE:
Innovative bush camps help AIDS orphans
PLUS
News
August 25, 2004
http://www.plusnews.org/AIDSreport.asp?ReportID=3808
JOHANNESBURG
- NGOs dealing with children orphaned by HIV/AIDS have tended to
concentrate on material support, neglecting their emotional and
psychosocial needs.
But a developmental
organisation in the southern region of Zimbabwe is filling that
gap by using bush camps to teach orphans how to cope with their
trauma.
Masiye Camp
has been organising bush camps in the Matopos national park,
65km south of
Bulawayo, since 1998. Teaching life skills through bush camps is
an African tradition that is still alive in some societies, but
the practice has been remodelled to address the new stress HIV/AIDS
has placed on communities.
The 2004 UNAIDS
global report on the epidemic has estimated that there are about
980,000 AIDS orphans in Zimbabwe. But these figures fail to reveal
the psychological effect on the young people who have nursed and
lost their parents under traumatic circumstances, without receiving
any psychological support from their relatives or communities.
In most cases,
the fight for survival does not even give these children time to
mourn their loss.
"Many children
we have worked with show psychosomatic disturbances, depression,
very low self-esteem, disturbed social behaviour, hopelessness and
low levels of life skills due to parental death," Riego, one of
the camp's counsellors, told PlusNews. "This might result in stunted
development of emotional intelligence and life skills."
Every school
holiday, Masiye offers eight-day camps for 80 children in four categories:
under fives, six- to 11-year-olds, 12- to 16-year-olds and children
who head households.
The day is filled
with outdoor activities and talks on issues affecting children and
youth, counsellor-directed education and skills-development. Participants
can choose between play activities - including arts and crafts,
canoeing and challenge courses - as well as team-building exercises,
such as tug-of-war and treasure hunts.
According to
the camp organisers, the skills children are taught can be used
in their daily lives. Canoeing, for example, is not seen as a recreational
sport but an exercise in experiencing limits, dangers, rules and
teamwork.
Arts, craft
and music courses are aimed at giving children resources to start
income-generating projects after they return home. Children who
head households are also taught teenage parenting as well as household
and business management.
There are 10
youth leaders at the camp, who are trained by psychologists and
counsellors. In extreme cases, the youth leaders require the support
of a child psychologist, as the children's mental problems can sometimes
lead to aggressive behaviour, drug taking, smoking and stealing.
The camp holiday
would most likely be the first time someone was available and willing
to listen to the children's stories, Riego commented.
"Most of these
children suffer tremendous trauma and psychosomatic disturbances
due to unresolved emotions. In the camp, they gain trust and learn
that they are not alone in their situation," explained a Masiye
Camp official who asked not to be named.
Allowing the
children to grieve is one of the most important aspects of the camp
holiday.
"In their day-to-day
lives, these children don't get the opportunity to speak about their
problems. Most children do not go through a proper bereavement phase
- they don't talk about their loss, and many act as if their parents
were still alive," the official noted.
Youth leaders
regard it as their biggest achievement when the participants gradually
open up and admit to their feelings during the camp.
But when the
camp is over, reality sets in again. The lack of community support
and their heavy daily responsibilities often leave the children
feeling even more depressed.
The lack of
follow-up services and continuous support has been a weak point
in the Masiye programme, the youth leaders acknowledged.
"The camp must
not be a stand-alone programme. We need to link psychosocial support
with community care programmes. At the moment, the community doesn't
comprehend the need for psychosocial support and children's rights,"
the official said.
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