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Through the Eyes of the Manzini Boys |
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On 15 April 2008 Manzini Youth Care held a fund raising photographic exhibition at The Lighthouse, Nottinghill Gate, London, featuring photographs taken by the Manzini boys. If you are considering placing an order for a photographic print please visit http://image.ecoptimist.com |
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For more than 30 years MYC has provided accommodation, support, care and education for marginalized and homeless young people at risk through poverty.
Father Larry McDonnell, a Salesian priest, was and still is the leading inspiration behind this project and today MYC runs six residential homes for over a hundred and twenty boys.
In 2000 Father McDonnell’s outreach work identified a very concerning situation where a growing number of young people and children were living totally on the streets, some for as long as 2-3 years. |
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Manzini Youth Care Movie |
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For more than 30 years MYC has provided accommodation, support, care and education for marginalized and homeless young people at risk through poverty.
Father Larry McDonnell, a Salesian priest, was and still is the leading inspiration behind this project and today MYC runs six residential homes for over a hundred and twenty boys.
In 2000 Father McDonnell’s outreach work identified a very concerning situation where a growing number of young people and children were living totally on the streets, some for as long as 2-3 years.
The research showed that the boys were:
Begging for food and money Foraging in dustbins Buying cheap solvents to alleviate hunger Turning to stealing The target of predatory abusive males At great risk of infection from STD’s and HIV/AIDS At risk of becoming criminalized
Why were these boys on the streets? Many were AIDS orphans Increasing numbers of grandmothers caring for too many children Extended families no longer able to bear financial burden Some were runaways from abusive carers Breakdown of family structure/step-parent families Extreme poverty compounded by years of drought in some rural areas. Many needed to be re-socialised in the ways of Swazi society and also some needed to be weaned off abusive substances, so as to be re-integrated into a school situation.
In 2002 the first step was taken to try and create a more informal structure where the idea of learning life skills was presented as non-threatening and could occasionally be FUN. For some months this took place on some waste ground outside the town where a group of boys stayed at night; gradually a trust began to grow and eventually the boys began to make their way to some very modest MYC premises in Manzini which eventually came to be known as ‘Little School’; it proved to be a very necessary transition period for the boys who grew in confidence. Since then many have moved into mainstream schooling.
Coca Cola provided the funding to build a new ‘Little School’ called “Sandrini” which is central to this charity’s goals. Swazis, most of whom are untrained but willing and committed, staff the school. They work for little money. One of the most enthusiastic, Mduduzi, a young man ‘raised ‘by MYC has been active in the school now for over two years, and wishes to be trained as a schoolteacher. It is wonderful to be able to make this possible.
Education is the key to unlock poverty |
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Manzini Youth Care in the UK |
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UK contacts for Manzini Youth Care are Joseph A. Farrell and Cordelia Brown, please click on Contact for more information about Manzini Youth Care |
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