Archive for mariannhill

“We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It’s not just in some of us; it’s in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same.”

‘quote from Nelson Mandela’s inauguration speech’

‘Khanyisela’ in a very real way the learners at St Francis College in Mariannhill, South Africa have shown what this word means. I received an email from my dear friend, Glenda Hartel, the other day informing me of a generous donation from the students at SFC.  A group of socially minded teens have come together to create the Peace Forum; this group hopes to raise awareness of social issues and are actively affecting change in their communities.  This past school year the Peace Forum’s main focus was ‘improving the lives of others’ and by their own initiative they sought to help St Vincent’s specifically through the Khanyisela Scholarship. 

The students at SFC raised an astounding R600; and some very special learners also donated their very own pocket money in hope of assisting the wonderful children at St Vincent’s receive a higher education.   They have given so much and have opened opportunities that these children might not normally have; a chance to build a good life for themselves and their families.

I was so excited to hear that not only were SFC students donating money, but most importantly they were also giving their time to build relationships with these children.  Youth helping youth is the most powerful thing that can change the futures of those who need help along the way.  The words and actions of youth are so important in today’s society. 

 Below is the email I received from Mrs Hartel.  I think it aptly shows the generous hearts of the St Francis learners.  The youth of today continue to inspire and lead the way to a better society for all.

Yes, the Youth Peace Forum proudly donated R600 towards the Khanyisela Project. I have already told you the challenge this year was restoring dignity to people’s lives. The learners chose the orphanage. We did not know anything about the orphanage when we started and now we’re almost part of their family.

The learners spent two hours every Saturday revising Maths, English and Isizulu with them. They also taught them the Diski dance, the Waka-waka dance, football, and just some non-structured games and fun. It was awesome seeing our own learners’ lives being changed by this project. They just came up with more and more ideas. They requested clothes from their fellow learners and are donating on a regular basis. Then they undertook this project of raising some money for the Khanyisela Project. It was heart-warming to see them being so eager. I was so pleasantly suprised when our headboy and two others came to my home one afternoon to donate some of their pocket money. They weren’t happy with the amount their class had donated.

South African kids are amazing individuals!!

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St Vincent Children’s Home Saint

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

It’s often easy to refer to a name repeatedly and have no idea who or what this person did that was important enough to have so many institutions named after him!  In the case of St Vincent, there is a myriad number of institutions dedicated to this Saint  and most of the institutions deal specifically with charitable services in one way or another.  I was curious to find out more about his humble man whose name I have repeated thousands of times over but realized I had only a basic understanding of what he was about.  Below is a small biography of the man that St Vincent Childrens Home was named after.

 

St. Vincent was born of poor parents in the village of Pouy in Gascony, France, about 1580. He enjoyed his first schooling under the Franciscan Fathers at Acqs. Such had been his progress in four years that a gentleman chose him as subpreceptor to his children, and he was allowed to continue his studies without being a burden to his parents. In 1596, he went to the University of Toulouse for theological studies, and there he was ordained priest in 1600.

In 1605, on a voyage by sea from Marseilles to Narbonne, he fell into the hands of African pirates and was carried as a slave to Tunis. His captivity lasted about two years, until Divine Providence enabled him to effect his escape. After a brief visit to Rome he returned to France, where he became preceptor in the family of Emmanuel de Gondy, Count of Goigny, and General of the galleys of France. In 1617, he began to preach missions, and in 1625, he lay the foundations of a congregation which afterward became the Congregation of the Mission or Lazarists, so named on account of the Priory of St. Lazarus, which the Fathers began to occupy in 1633.

It would be impossible to enumerate all the works of this servant of God. Charity was his predominant virtue. It extended to all classes of persons, from forsaken childhood to old age. The Sisters of Charity also owe the foundation of their congregation to St. Vincent. In the midst of the most distracting occupations his soul was always intimately united with God. Though honored by the great ones of the world, he remained deeply rooted in humility. The Apostle of Charity, the immortal Vincent de Paul, breathed his last in Paris at the age of eighty. His feast day is September 27th. He is the patron of charitable societies. [i]

St Vincent is also the patron Saint of volunteers.


[i] Catholic Online. (n.d.) Retrieved on October 29, 2010, from http://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=326

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A South African Godchild

Friday, August 20th, 2010

The most recent letter from Eva (not her real name) hangs on my fridge.  In it, the 15 year-old adolescent residing at St. Vincent Children’s Home describes her experiences at the local senior primary school (the work is getting easier), her plans for an upcoming holiday (going home to see her family), and her favorite things (dance, sports, and music).  By far the most colorful item on my fridge, the handmade card prompts frequent thoughts of my friend and reflections on our time together back in Mariannhill.  As I read Eva’s letter again recently, I was reminded of an entry that I had posted about her back when I kept a blog about my experiences in South Africa.  I’ve decided to re-post the entry here to share the joy that I feel for having Eva in my life.  But also for a second reason, as a personal reminder of the commitment that the Khanyisela Scholarship has to the children of St. Vincent’s – to their educational pursuits and academic potential, certainly, but also to their character and their resiliency.

September 18, 2007

Eva’s real name is Thandi, a word that means, simply, “love.” To me, though, she has always just been Eva, although the first time I went to visit her at St. Vincent Children’s Home, the orphanage in Mariannhill, the staff didn’t know which child I was referring to when I asked for her by that name. I finally had to describe her as the twelve-year-old girl who had been admitted to the hospital the week before.

I first met Eva nearly a year ago. As I was walking into the hospital on my first day back after a short holiday, a small voice from behind me called out, “Anne!” I turned and saw an unfamiliar girl wearing an oversized hospital gown running towards me. I remember feeling immediately embarrassed as I wondered who this child was that seemed to know me. There are so many children here here – kids playing in the streets of the communities; patients in the pediatric ward; children of friends, patients, or co-workers. I searched my mind to place this child’s face, but came up blank. Trying my best to hide my lack of recognition, I waited for her to run up to me, hugged her, and exclaimed, “Mtanami! Unjani? Ngiyajabula ukukubona!!” – “My child! How are you? I am so happy to see you!” I discreetly sought to identify her by asking her how her mom was doing, how everything at home was, and, finally, – where does she live again? When she answered the last question by saying St. Vincent’s, I understood not only that she was one of the children from the orphanage, but also how inappropriate my first two questions were. Perhaps Eva had recognized me from church or seen me along the roads of Mariannhill. Still, it was strange that she knew me – at that time, I had been here for only about six months, visited the Zulu church irregularly, had never actually been to the orphanage, and would not have seen her on the road in front of the primary school because she happened to attend school in a different town.

Somehow, though, she did know me, even knew my name, and it wasn’t long before I learned hers: Eva, as she insisted that I call her. After that, I visited her every day the rest of the time that she was in the hospital, and then occasionally at St. Vincent’s when she returned back there. When I moved out of the guesthouse and down to the hospital, I saw her less frequently but we would still meet up at church on a Sunday or at the hospital when she came to pick up her medication.

But seeing Eva this much was not enough to realize that her health was worsening.  A growing caseload of outpatients, a new rehab program at a local clinic, and complex cases in the community had taken up most of my time, so the inpatient wards that I would normally cover were being seen by one of the physio assistants. When Eva was admitted to one of those wards a few weeks ago, I didn’t see her once during her entire hospital stay.

I didn’t realize any of this until last Thursday when I was walking around the other side of Mariannhill near St. Vincent’s Home. Sister John Paul who works at the orphanage must have seen me passing by and came out to greet me. She said that she had been looking for me for the past two weeks – now that I was no longer staying at the guesthouse, though, she didn’t know where to find me. Anyway, she said, she was glad to have seen me now because a group of children from the orphanage were preparing for baptism to take place in two days. Eva, who was part of this group, had chosen me as her ummeli, or godmother. This was when I learned about Eva’s health and recent hospital stay. Sr. John Paul was unsure if Eva would be allowed to be baptized, as all of the other children had already met with the priest to answer questions about the Catholic faith – a mini oral examination that Eva had missed when she was in the hospital. The sisters who run the orphanage hoped that she could still be baptized because the next opportunity would not be until November and, as Sr. John Paul put it, “you never know what could happen.”

As it turned out, Fr. Mchunu, the parish priest, agreed with the sisters and wanted to baptize Eva. The baptism took place this past Saturday. I felt honored that she asked me to be her godmother, yet unworthy of filling such a role after my neglect of the child during her illness. I don’t know if I will be able to forgive myself for that. But Eva has, after I apologized to her. I will visit her more regularly now and I also gave my cell phone number to the Sisters at the orphanage for them to contact me if anything happens or if she needs anything. It’s the least I can do, and hopefully Eva will benefit from that. I am, after all, her godmother.

Three years later, Eva remains my goddaughter at St. Vincent’s.  We keep in touch through letters, the occasional email when assisted by the office manager at the children’s home, and once she even sent me a video of herself that she had made with the help of another former volunteer.  Eva’s health remains fair yet stable, largely thanks to her tenacious spirit that prevailed over the health crisis three years ago.  As she nears 18, the maximum age for residing at St. Vincent’s, I do not know where she will go.  Perhaps on to further schooling, or maybe she will find work in Mariannhill, where she could remain close to the supportive environment of St. Vincent’s.  Or perhaps Eva will simply return to the community that she once left – much stronger now, much more independent, much brighter.  And maybe if she does return there, that light within – shining ever more brilliantly – will bring inspiration and hope to her own goddaughter.

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South African Games – Child’s Play Doesn’t Require Toys

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010
Every week during my stay in South Africa I had the chance to take a stroll to St Vincent Children’s Home for a visit and some play time with the children.

South African rock gamesSouth African Rock Games

There were several games played, but my favourite to remember included common stones and quick reflexes. Rock games are fun…if you have fast eye-hand co-ordination, but I learnt from the children of St Vincent’s that even if you don’t, the rules can be bent.

In the shade, on the pavement, I’m sitting with three other sets of sturdy legs and dusty bare feet that are adjusting and folding for a better advantage position. There is a scraggly, uneven circle drawn with a pebble, nature’s chalk, at the center of our group and each contestant is guarding a pile of rocks strategically placed next to her speedy draw hand.

Up goes a single stone, tossed at a practiced and calculated height and into the circle go the pile of rocks. The stone is caught, tossed up again and all the rocks in the centre are raked out, except one. The tossed stone lands victoriously back into the hand…hopefully. These four steps are all done with the same hand, no switching allowed. The single left over stone is collected as score. This game is very similar to “Jacks” but seems infinitely harder.

Hushed voices are remarking on the success of each attempt and all eyes are concentrated on the circle and stones.

It’s my turn…if I remember correctly Mario Cart was easier-do you have this? No. The toss up, hands frantically groping for rocks-do I look at the pile or the stone in the air? Stone landing-ooops-I thought my hand was faster than that. A second attempt; throwing the stone higher for more air time doesn’t produce desired results-I think I lost my stone over there somewhere.

I am trying again for good measure but still my hand is no better and just as clumsy. There are twinkles in the eyes watching me, a short decisive conversation amongst my contenders and a sudden shift in the game from throwing a stone up and catching it to throwing up an imaginary stone and pretending to catch it.

I am laughing in sheepish appreciation of such a gesture, especially because there are no questions as to whether or not the aces I’m playing with will or will not participate in this new variation. Around the circle each girl takes her turn moving the rocks in and out of the circle and pretends to throw and catch this other imaginary stone. The game continues on, now that the playing field is level for everyone involved. What helps me is good enough for everyone else too.  An example of South African ubuntu.

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