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Chimanimani
Community-based Orphanage - It started as a joke!
Intermediate Technology Development
Group (ITDG) Southern Africa
Newsletter Vol 6 No.2, July
2002
by Johnson Siamachira
Fourteen year old Fortunate Mukonza,
of Chakohwa ward in Chimanimani district, has experienced a sad
life without parents, both of whom succumbed to AIDS-related illnesses.
Her life is a picture of strife: on a daily basisi she struggles
to get food, shelter and a basic education. Hers is a heavy burden,
but she struggles on and smiles at people, sometimes. Fortunate's
father died in 1998 after severely struggling to cope with AIDS-related
ailments for over five years. Her mother died last year, leaving
behind a four-year old child, who himself is ill.
"Our life is like a fairly tale.
When our mother passed away, everything became difficult," she says
while trying to gather strength and courage to continue recounting
her gloomy story. She moves on: "Very few of our relatives recognise
our presence. Times are hard."
A typical day for Fortunate, who is
doing Grade Six at the local Neshitima Primary School, begins at
4.00 in the morning. "I go to the borehole, prepare a fire and water
the garden, then I go to school."
The 14 year-old child, who has missed
two years of school, works for 10 hours a day during weekends selling
vegetables at the local market, earning about Z$100,00 for her aged
grandmother. Clothing? This is just a dream. She is now using her
late mother's dresses. However, she does not mind. Life goes on.
"I hope to become a school teacher
when I grow up," she says, adding, "God knows my problems and He
will look after me." In another part of the district, in Rupise
ward, two-year old Matthew Tapera cannot walk unaided. And he can
hardly talk, save for the continuous mumblings of "ambuya, ambuya"(grandma,
grandma). His fast ageing grandmother, Clara Nduna, is looking after
him. Both Matthew's parents died last year, leaving him without
clothing and blankets.
However, these scenes may soon be a
thing of the past thanks to a community-based orphanage that is
fast gaining ground in this vast district. The orphanage has started
taking care of AIDS orphans like Fortunate and Matthew's education,
as well as health and nutritional needs.
Called the Chimanimani Community-based
Orphanage, the programme aims to alleviate poverty among AIDS orphans.
Established in 1998 with the facilitation of the Intermediate Technology
Development Group-Southern Africa, the focus of the programme is
to build the capacity of local people, including the orphans, to
construct gardens, rebuild huts and under-take other income-generating
projects to ensure sustainability of the projects.
The organisation's Rural Communities
Program came up with the idea of strengthening a community-based
orphanage in Chimanimani. It is exploring the different ways of
working with rural communities to bolster institutional and technological
capacity using participatory approaches, and tapping the already-existing
potential within these communities.
Programme Manager Absolom Masendeke,
says: "We discovered that once the orphans were identified, that
the core problem to over-come is poverty. Besides medical and counselling
needs to be provided for, there are also basic issues such as food,
clothing and shelter that must be met."
The project started as a joke. Beginning
with a few women preparing food in their homes and feeding some
of the children who had lost their parents to AIDS. The program
now boasts of having penetrated ten other wards and has women volunteers
who provide the much needed care.
Visit the ITDG
fact
sheet
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