Monday 27 February 2017

A World of Contrasts

I am in South Africa! This fact still hasn’t quite sunk in despite me seeing Table Mountain on my way to work each morning. Am definitely waiting for my brain to catch up with everything I am seeing, experiencing and hearing.

I landed on Sunday morning collected my luggage and met the driver from Projects Abroad, we began chatting about my previous trip to South Africa and how corrupt the government is, but within 15 minutes of leaving the carpark I witnessed my first car crash, a lunatic driver swerved through cars in front of us, driving very recklessly before crashing into a van and causing it to flip over several times. It is common for people not to wear seatbelts in Africa this resulted in passengers being propelled out of the windows and onto the side of the road. 
As you can imagine this was not the welcome to Cape Town I had imagined. Eventually the police and ambulance arrived but the driver had kept going only to cause another crash round the corner. The driver I was with got out to give details of the car to the police and after a short while we continued on our way, at the scene of the second car crash we heard that the driver had been caught as he had abandoned his car and ran for the Township.

All along the side of the main road coming out of the airport is a huge Township/ Informal Settlement with a population of 1 million people. The multi coloured shelters have been a sight I have seen again and again this week as I have gone to the prisons. It never ceases to fascinate me how stark the difference between the rich and poor is, this is very apparent in Cape Town as they live in close proximity.

I had inductions on Monday to Projects Abroad and to my Social Justice Project. Met the full team of the legal volunteers, having met a handful of people on my trip to the Water Front on Sunday. I have consistently felt disorientated this week as I walked round the Water Front - I might well have been in any sunny country with a sea view. I saw a H&M, Monsoon in air conditioned shopping centres, but encountered Zebra, Warthog and Caterpillars in the food market. It was clear that the Water Front is a man made tourist destination for foreigners and not seen as part of Cape Town by the locals.


Me post eating a fried caterpillar, was not great! 



I discovered my week will look quite a bit different from what I had imagined:

Monday – AM, case work and planning – PM, Vredelus a centre for juvenile female offenders both awaiting trial and sentenced offenders.

Tuesday – AM, Lindelani offers specialised assessment and care for young people who have been identified as needing care due to neglect, abuse or behavioural problems. Girls alternate weeks with PM Lindelani Boys

Wednesday – AM, case work and planning – PM, Bonnytoun a detention centre for sentenced teenage boys

Thursday –  AM, St Anne’s a shelter for abused women – PM, Bonnytoun a detention centre for teenage boys awaiting sentence

Friday – AM case work and planning with Internal Review Meeting at 10:30am with all Human Rights staff and volunteers – PM off

As you can see this is full on! This coming week will be my first experience of this from beginning to end, I am nervous to be constantly walking into new places but am keen to have a taste of every project I am working on. Look forward to Friday afternoon next week when I can take a step back and see what I will actually be doing.

So far I have only been to Bonnytoun (Wednesday and Thursday) and spent the rest of the week being introduced to the different topics verbally and been handed 13 cases to work on. Cases come from people walking in to the office asking for help but mainly from legal clinics run three times a week in different impoverished areas for people who can’t afford the transport cost to get to the office. I will be working on cases that have no legal element, most of them are problems that in the UK would be worked on my a social worker.

As I have mentioned this week has been full of contrast, some time has been spent sat working on my laptop in a cool office with other volunteers around me, some time has been spent in stuffy prison rooms with young offenders leading a workshop about peer pressure whilst Michael (the new head of Social Justice, an ex offender who started the week before me) translates as and when needed into the language of gangsters ( a mix of languages spoken around Africa with words of its own, I am told even if I wanted to I could never learn this without being a member of a Township gang). Some time has been spent eating pizza at the Waterfront and taking stunning pictures at Hout Bay. Putting sun cream on has become part of my daily routine, so has conserving all possible water as we are currently experiencing a big drought across the cape. This truly feels the thousands of miles it is away from my old routine in the UK.


I have so much more to talk about but know I have many weeks to fill you in on all my racing thoughts and mind blowing experiences.

Prayer Requests:

- Energy! This is SO exhausting, am going to sleep much earlier than I am used to in order to get plenty of sleep in before my early start in the morning, am looking forward to things being familiar in a couple of weeks.
- Good relationships at church to form, went to two churches on Sunday and think I am going to go to the one at the bottom of the road regularly, was great to be introduced to new people who are completely separate from work.
- Good planning to fit in my church work during my lunch breaks at work where there is good wifi connection. 


Thank you for making it to the end of my fifth blog post. 

Thursday 16 February 2017

Hopes that have become realities


Ahh! This is my last blog post before I go to South Africa, just two sleeps left!

I am so incredibly amazed at the opportunities that have come my way since September, I wanted to share with you my hopes and dreams that have come to fruition.

As recorded in my notebook on the 13th September I prayed for three things:

1) For exciting opportunities to make a difference, open my mind and empower others.
    'For the sake of the world burn like a fire in me'

2) For a support team as I left DBT and with friends going of to university. I wanted to grown with great friendships that promoted courage and optimism.

3) For eagerness to explore the bible and my faith more.

Exciting opportunities:

- Christians in Politics Youth Engagement Board
This has involved working with other young people around the country who are eager to reach out to young Christians and encourage them to engage with politics.
CIP - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aa4canKcoYo
As you can imagine this is right up my street! Have loved doing listening workshops with young people in Knowle and hearing about what politics looks like to them. Also had an amazing opportunity to do some filming with PAX a Christian Organisation that aims to look at how faith impacts life. Will let you know when the clip is complete and ready for viewing - it is an interview with myself and two other young woman each of us from different political parties, sharing our views on faith and politics.
PAX - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-RBmxb6_pI




- Amnesty Enrichment Project at Alderbrook Sixth Form
Last year my Solihull Amnesty Group was contacted by Alderbrook Sixth Form in Solihull to see if we wanted to run 10 weeks of enrichment sessions on a Wednesday afternoon. This was an amazing chance to spread awareness of Amnesty International in Solihull and engage young people in Human Rights. So exciting! So I took on organising it and running the first five sessions with the lovely Pooja and am now handing over the David and Celia to do the last five weeks. It has been great to facilitate discussion about the Refugee Crisis, encourage debate and independent research with 6 students. Did my final session this week on Guantanamo Bay, always love talking about the tension between terrorism and civil liberties. To find out more like the Solihull Amnesty International Group on Facebook to get the links for the weekly blog.


Support Team:

It has been amazing to strengthen friendships with so many people in the last few months. In particular friends who have been or are on gap years now, sharing memories and experiences has been such a source of encouragement. Very grateful for the late night texts, long skype calls and many coffee catch ups! Thank you to Kara, Charis, Fiona and Victoria for keeping my sane and sharing this journey with me!



Faith:

- Christianity Explored
In October I started the Christianity Explored course at Knowle with Anna. It was brilliant to work through Mark's gospel with a group of people over a series of 8 sessions picking out how it was relevant to our everyday lives. It was a chance to get to know more people within Knowle Church and deepen my understand of the Bible. Really grateful for everyone in my group who shared their stories and insight into the bible study.

- Home group 
I have joined a home group, a proper adult thing to do! I have managed to go to two sessions before my trip and discuss Genesis and how God reveals his plans and promises to us, which has been great. I am very grateful for them taking me on as a temporary member during my gap year, it will be amazing to have this as a link back to Knowle church when I am in Africa. Thank you for committing to pray for me and keep up with what I am doing, really appreciate it.

- Knowle Church
I have been going to the 7:30pm service for the last couple of years now and enjoyed hearing from a range of people. Getting to know both the young people and the adults who go there has been great. In the last few months having the chance to work for the church, doing social media and admin for the Youth Team has really boosted this. I feel much more at home there now then I did last summer, was lovely to share my a few details of my trip with them on Sunday and give prayer requests. Look forward to updating them when I get back.

Prayer Requests -

- Saying goodbye to my family on Saturday afternoon
- Pacing myself when I get to South Africa, got induction days on Monday (office& small tour of the city) and Tuesday (in the Social Justice Department, getting my schedule)
- Good relationships to begin with my host family on Sunday

Thank you so much for reading PART ONE of my blog posts, can't wait to share the start of PART TWO next week. Eeeek!