Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Monthly Update: April


Community volunteer Matilda teaching at Simunye Creche.
As the cool weather began to roll over St Lucia, South Africa, our projects flourished as new ventures began and improvements were made to ongoing initiatives. A month full of enthusiastic volunteers with limitless ideas made April a very exciting and productive month.

Read on to hear about all the new and exciting happenings!

Crèche / Holiday Club
April saw our community volunteers participating in a mixture of crèche and holiday club, as the Easter holidays meant school took a two-week pause. The volunteers had a great time organising interesting games for holiday club, like different types of tag, face painting, sports, crafts and more. One particular hit was creating a collage – an activity brought all the way from another project in India by community volunteer Britt-Louise.

We returned to crèche during the second week of the month, heading back to Simunye and Khula Nomathiya, where the volunteers began to teach more about family, methods of transport and water. Shwele has even been raving about what excellent teachers our April volunteers have made. Community volunteers have started bringing the CD player to the crèche too, and the kids are fond of dancing after their lessons are finished.

Support Group
This month has been a very positive one for both of our support groups. In Khula, the ladies continue to make over R700 throughout the course of the month, and their numbers are beginning to grow. One very special Tuesday, a local man who does business consulting visited the support group. Word was spread at the clinic about our support group and the special speaker and we were welcomed by over 40 attendees! 

The Induna receiving a pedicure from
medical volunteer Miriam.
The inspirational speech consisted of motivating people to follow their dreams and trying to find the opportunities to start their own businesses instead of waiting for employment. A great success! David is also still making his regular visits to the support group, and over the course of the month they have done home exercises, math lessons, learned about diabetes and had lengthy discussions about their personal affairs. The ladies also acquired a new stall at the side of the main road, which we will be refurbishing for their use in the coming weeks.

At Ezwenelisha Support Group the numbers continue to grow, with new attendees joining every week. At the beginning of the month we had a very interesting discussion about how to get more involved in the community once the Induna was inaugurated on the 29th. Things like beginning to work in the crèches, doing more HIV Education courses and events were brought up, and we are eager to begin planning with Bheki, the new Induna, next month. 

Funny enough, we had a very close encounter with the future leader, as he stopped by our support group when we were teaching foot health and giving our members pedicures. He promptly plunged his feet in one of our buckets and allowed us to massage his feet along with the rest of the members! The garden is also still going strong, with carrots, spinach, onion and pumpkin growing at a steady pace.

Home Based Care
This month, the volunteers continued to use the helpful colour-coded system for our patients that was developed by our February volunteers. Seeing “red” patients frequently and “green” patients on occasion. This has made their weekly planning session easy and productive, and has helped us keep track of our patients with ease.

As far as our “red” patients go, it was a difficult month for some of them. Veronic in particular is having plenty of trouble, and although we convinced her mom to let her go to the hospital to have a growth looked at, the hospital discharged her after giving her a blood transfusion – a very frustrating situation for all involved. Penduile’s sister had to go to the clinic to be checked for TB and although the wound on her neck was looking better at the beginning of the month it is still very swollen. Gogo Breast Cancer’s state remains the same and we continue to visit her grandson, Sipho. Bheki’s Karposi’s Sarcoma is slowly getting worse but he remains in great spirits and continues to attend support group each week.

The volunteers this month also created a new sign-out sheet for our medical supplies, which will help track our donations with ease so we can ensure we are using all of our supplies to the fullest. Our relationship with the clinic also continues to strengthen, as the volunteers have slowly begun doing more than just blood pressures and weights, moving on to doing more statistics work at the clinic and aiding the nurses with simple tasks in the consulting rooms. We also continue to receive donations, such as paracetamol and bandages, for our home based care patients from the clinic.

Afterschool Club
Reading Club in the container.
This month, we continued to regularly attend both of our Afterschool Clubs in Ezwenelisha and Khula. Ezwenelisha began to receive computer lessons from medical volunteer Stefanie, who has proven herself to be a very dedicated teacher. The kids are quickly learning under her lessons and she has been teaching other volunteers to follow suit. 

Although the time of our Afterschool Club has been cut short, we have continued to play the same games and take time to colour and dance with the learners before heading home a little earlier than we’re used to. Typically the volunteers use this extra time to water our new garden in Ezwenelisha.

In Khula, the volunteers have been colouring and playing their usual favourite games. Near the end of April, we began to open the container (now a library) for the use of a few of the learners each week. We began with eight boys, who went to the container with some of the volunteers to practice their reading. It was a great success and we’re hoping to continue to bring a handful of kids every week to the container to practice their reading as a kind of Reading Club

HIV Education
This month was a great one for HIV education, beginning with our volunteers teaching many of the Zulu dancers employed by Veyane, the local tourist cultural village run by Khula’s Induna. We were happy to have more men in the classes, as we have trouble recruiting men for the course.

We were also able to begin teaching the employees and migrant workers at one of the farms in Monzi, one of the surrounding communities that is home to thousands of hectares of sugar cane fields. Thirty employees attended the course on the first day and although many were too nervous to write the test, 15 passed with flying colours. Being the largest class Shwele has ever taught, it also marked the first time the volunteers used their new resources – things like flash cards and small games – to make the class more of a workshop for the attendees. In all, we taught 34 adults HIV education over the course of the month.

Extras
Plenty of new and exciting things happened over the course of the month, including trips, small projects and improvements to current initiatives.

The volunteers made our first official trip to the Isiphaphalazi Butterfly House and its tea garden, located on the main road in Khula Village. The project employs many local people, which makes us supporting the venture very important to both the staff and volunteers. We had a wonderful tour of the butterfly house followed by delicious tea and cakes.

Our logo on the alleyway in St Lucia.
Volunteers also demonstrated their artistic talents by painting our logo on the wall in St Lucia. They also made more bookends for the container and painted beautiful designs on the Malibongwe bed.

As far as improvements to our current projects go, the volunteers helped keep the chickens out of our AMREF garden by putting up chicken wire along the edges of the garden. With any luck they won’t get in any more! We have also continued to brick build at Inkanyezi, and spent a few afternoons beginning to create a new sign for the creche’s entrance.

We were happy to be invited to the Induna’s inauguration on the 29th of April, and five volunteers, Sofie, Alanna, Nokwethemba and Shwele headed to the Induna’s house for a lovely ceremony filled with a speech from the king, singing, dancing and traditional ceremonies. We’re glad the community was a part of choosing the new Induna, and are eager to begin meeting with him as he has already shown such an interest in African Impact. During the ceremony African Impact was mentioned numerous times, both as donors in the community. Also, when Khula’s Induna was giving advice to Bheki Nkosi he told him he must work closely with us to improve the community. 

To read about our 10 Families project, check out one of our latest blogs

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