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Guiding the
Lost Generation They left school to fight apartheid. Today,
unemployed and undereducated, they fight their personal demons.
By Kamika
Dunlap
Kids of Youth
For Christ's Amakhaya's Children's Home pose for a picture and show
off their art work. Photo by Kamika Dunlap.
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JOHANNESBURG, South Africa —
Slouched in his seat, Marcel Houston took a few seconds to tighten his
black head wrap and clear his throat before describing how he was shot in
a drive-by attack.
"I was coming from my
fiancée's house, and, because I was labeled a type of gangster, I got
shot," said Houston, 21, from Newlands, a nearby township notorious for
gang violence. "I got stabbed, I got beaten up. Tomorrow I'm going to walk
past there and those guys are going to look at me - what can I do? It's
just what I have to go through."
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Punch the Bag, Beat the Streets
Young
boxers hope their fists lead them from crime and poverty.
By Kamika
Dunlap
CAPE TOWN, South Africa
— In the flashy new boxing ring built in 1997 as part of this city's
attempt to host the 2004 Olympics, Chris Kibiti shadowboxes and
trades punches with his sparring partner every day.
Photo of Chris
Kibiti by Mimi Chakarova.
No Olympic medals will
be won in the shiny arena. Cape Town lost the bid to Athens, leaving
behind this reminder of a dream that didn't come true. But Kibiti,
21, hurries through the dangerous, dirt streets of the Khayelitsha
shantytown to train in it nonetheless.
"I'll fight for the
world title," said Kibiti, ranked number one in the city's
mini-flyweight division. "I hope one day I'll make millions."
With his undefeated
record in seven bouts, Kibiti plans to secure a better life for his
family. "I'm staying in those shelters," Kibiti said, pointing to a
makeshift shack of galvanized tin. "I want to take my family to the
suburbs."
An overcrowded
township, Khayelitsha is one of Cape Town's most poverty-stricken
neighborhoods. Kids loiter at stop signs, harassing drivers of
passing cars for food and money. Most of its half-million residents
live in shacks constructed with sheets of iron and pieces of
collected wood.
Some of Khayelitsha's
young men come to the Oliver R. Tambo Centre, named after the former
African National Congress leader, to escape the crime that surrounds
them. Inside the boxing ring, engaging in one of the world's most
dangerous sports, they feel safer than at home. The 10,000-seat
arena may never be filled with fans, but it stands as a refuge, a
place to sidestep the pitfalls of a township where gangs are
plentiful and jobs are scarce.
Many young people
idolize Nelson Mandela, who took up boxing to keep fit while living
underground in the 1960s, when he was organizing the armed struggle
against apartheid. Thirty years later, the boxer became the nation's
first black president.
"We're engaging
potential criminals in something that's more business-like," said
David Mazomba, Kibiti's boxing promoter and a boxer for more than 15
years. "I want to get young people out of this situation."
The white-walled
two-story gym is bright and spacious. The basketball courts are
coated with a heavy wax with fiberglass backboards at each end.
Young boys and men, the youngest of whom is 10, filled the gym. Some
walked around bare-chested with boxing gloves while others were
dressed in karate gear. On the gym balcony young men rested for a
water break and took in the view of the shantytown that surrounds
them.
"In this business
sometimes I start in one place, and by the end of the day I end up
in a better place," said Mzonke Fanna, 25, of Khayelitsha, as he
described his experience traveling abroad for a boxing match.
"London was a nice
place, but I love Khayelitsha. I was born here," he said.
Inspired as a child by
Johannesburg boxer, "Baby" Jake Matala, Fanna plans to be a role
model for young men in his community.
"It's important to make
kids feel closer to sports instead of corruption," he said. "The
closer kids are to sports they can go anywhere."
Recently, Kibiti was
named "prospect of the year" and took a trip to Johannesburg, 775
miles northeast of here, for the professional boxing awards. It was
his first time on an airplane.
"It was a big
achievement for him," Mazomba said.
Yet this is only the
beginning of Kibiti's quest to become the world boxing champion and
to build a future for his family. On May 6, 2000 Kibiti is scheduled
to fight for the International Boxing Organization title and he is
hopeful.
"With determination and
desire I'll make it," he said. |
Houston isn't alone in his
plight, seated in a circle with 25 other young men and women talking about
issues of gangsterism and drug abuse in their neighborhoods. They are at
the Wilgespruit Center, about 30 miles outside of Johannesburg, for a
three-week retreat to assess their lives and plan ways to escape the cycle
of violence in their neighborhoods.
"Most of us are school
dropouts. There are no jobs for us, so we rob and steal," said Houston,
who is a dropout and unemployed himself.
Glen Steyn, founder and
director of Conquest For Life, an organization that attempts to provide
young people with alternatives to crime, helps lead the discussion.
"Nobody owes you anything but an opportunity," Steyn said.
Since 1996, Steyn has run the
Youth at Risk Program, a camp geared to reach kids age 6 to 21 who are in
trouble with the law, school dropouts, or unemployed. The Open Society
Foundation, a philanthropic organization established by British
billionaire George Soros, sponsors the camp. It is an effort to reduce
South Africa's increasing youth crime rate and social problems, which have
festered in apartheid's wake.
California, which saw
juvenile arrests for violent offenses double between 1986 and 1995,
recently enacted Proposition 21, a new law allowing prosecutors to try
juveniles in adult courts and increase penalties for gang-related crimes.
But South Africa is leaning toward diversion projects to reduce juvenile
crime.
South Africa does not keep a
separate tally of juvenile offenses. The National Youth Commission,
established by Nelson Mandela in 1996 as part of the government's plan to
address the challenges facing young people, estimates that criminals are
getting younger. In 1990, the average young perpetrator was 22. By 1998,
the age was 17.
Many young black South
Africans left their classrooms in the 1980s to join the street battles
against apartheid. Today they are undereducated and immune to violence,
posing the greatest threat to the stability and prosperity of a new South
Africa. The South African government established the National Youth
Commission to address this problem, but has not committed sufficient
funding for effective programs. Non-governmental organizations do the bulk
of the work in juvenile rehabilitation.
According to a recent crime
bulletin by South Africa Police Services, 43 percent of South Africa's
young people are "at risk" — functioning in society but showing urgent
need of help. Steyn's camp is a "safe space" for teenagers to share and
develop life skill, according to a report on the effects and effectiveness
of Conquest For Life's 1999 Youth Camps. The agency focuses on
team-building, conflict-management, problem-solving and decision-making.
Through such simple physical activities as crawling through a peer's legs
or offering a piggyback ride, young people learn about building trust. The
aim is to keep them from returning to gang-related violence and crime.
The teenagers at the camp
were dressed in loose fitting jeans and soccer jerseys, and many of them
wore head wraps and bandanas. Some had scars on their faces and arms. As
Steyn lead the discussion some kids snickered, while others sat quietly
with their arms folded across their chest. Five young sat together and
occasionally whispered back and forth.
"My father left me when I was
2 years old, and my mother left me when I was 4. I grew up with my
grandmother most of my life. She was like a role model. My mother was
never there for me," said Clive Bosman, 23, of Westbury, a township
outside of Johannesburg. "But I still love her irrespective of that. It
hurts me to know that my parents don't even care about me. These things
also drive me to a certain point in my life where I feel like I'm on my
own. I'm with my granny, she's getting old and I don't have a job yet. I
don't have a sense of direction."
Young people "at risk" will
find the answers to most of their problems within themselves. Learning to
take responsibility for their own lives is lesson one.
"If it's a skill, they could
learn it," Steyn said. "If it's an attitude, it's up to them."
First-time mother of a 20
month-old, Claudia May, 21, of Johannesburg said the camp made her realize
that having a good attitude is key for successful parenting.
"My mother took care of my
responsibilities, and that made life so easy for me. I never knew that I
had to go out in life and face the reality that I can't depend on family
and friends," she said. "It's my responsibility to look after my child,
and I must do what's right for me."
Although her attitude and
outlook on life are slowly beginning to change, May can't help but think
about the setbacks she's experienced because of her past decisions.
"I had my baby, and I thought
it would be hard for me to go back school," she said. Turning down her
parents' offer to look after her son while she went to school, May decided
not to return. "I never realized that my family really loved me by sending
me to school and giving me a second chance. I never took that chance."
About 18 percent of South
Africa's black youth aged 20 to 24 have never attended school, and 45
percent of those who do attend only reach high school, according to the
South African Police Services crime bulletin.
The lack of national youth
programs and the uncertainty of consistent donors for community programs
are two reasons youth aren't getting help faster, said Ted Leggett, a
researcher at the University of Natal's Center for Social Development
Studies.
"Organizations struggle to
keep afloat and are regionally situated," he said. "You would need a Glen
in every poor township," and that's just in order to band-aid a bleeding
situation.
Youth For Christ, in
Johannesburg, is another one of the few organizations trying to heal and
help South Africa's youth. The agency established "Amakhaya," ("homes for
the homeless" in Zulu), which houses about three dozen street kids. Its
job creation program, Zakheni, placed 43 percent of its 196 participants
in 1998.
"When working with young
people we don't aim to look at one aspect of the child," said Nicki
Bosman, Youth for Christ's development manager. "We try and work with the
whole person to meet all their needs. We cater to the need for education,
shelter, food, clothing, as well as emotional and spiritual needs."
Youth for Christ reaches
juveniles as they sit in prison awaiting trial. Prison workers spend maybe
just say six hours a week teaching young people about honesty and
self-discipline through activities. The workers leave them with a sense of
self-worth, Bosman said.
"The idea really is to keep
unsentenced kids out of prison and out of trouble," said Conrad Groenwald,
who heads social services at Johannesburg Prison and oversees the Youth
For Christ prison program. The prison is overpopulated and operates with a
limited amount of staff and money, he said, making it difficult to treat
sentenced juveniles in a child-friendly way.
"It's an extremely worrying
situation," he said.
Many of the youth serving
time in prison have committed violent crimes, such as rape, murder, and
possession of illegal firearms. For some offenders, the opportunity to
participate in a diversion project came too late. Sentenced juveniles must
then find ways to cope with the poor living, sleeping and eating
conditions of prison life.
Inside Johannesburg Prison, a
dark, cold and cave-like place, youths are held in
Marcel Huston in his black tank top and blue pants has a
little fun of his own at the Wilgespruit Community Center, while his
peers enjoy a piggy back ride activity. Photo by Kamika
Dunlap. |
dormitory-like cells with
bunk beds. As many as 60 kids are packed into cells allotted to hold 36.
The air is hot and filled with the stench of human excrement. Young people
sit on the grimy, urine-soaked prison floors, scarfing down their bowl of
bland porridge, a piece of bread and a cup of milk for lunch. For one hour
each day they are taken out to a small courtyard for recreational time.
Houston is fortunate. He has
never been to prison. After his camp experience he feels better prepared
to guard against becoming a victim or perpetrator of crime in his
neighborhood.
"Everyday I ask God to let me
see the next day," he said.
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