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Quaker Peace Centre, Capetown

The Quaker Peace Centre is a team of peacemakers and development practitioners from different backgrounds.

We work with people towards building a better society which fosters the creative and non-violent resolution of conflict, participatory development and the respect of self and others.

We do this through awareness-raising, capacity-building and the development of sustainable peace models.

Youth Program
Aims
Using experiential learning we build capacity in communities by helping children and parents take responsibility for educational activities and life-skills programmes in their communities. In this way they have a supportive and informative environment for learning and growing, and coming into contact with people from different backgrounds.

We also lobby and do advocacy work with youth organisations and government, and network to share skills and information.

Context
Most of our young people, from five to thirty-five, come from the poverty-stricken areas of Cape Town. Gangsterism is often seen as a means of getting material rewards, and social power. By engaging with youth groups we involve them in civic and community structures. Some are already in functioning groups with aims, whereas others come together informally, and may be in danger of being seduced into gangsterism. Unless young people find a meaningful role in our society, there can be no hope of enduring peace.

Activities
We run various camps such as on culture and diversity, gender, leadership and teenage sexuality. Our ongoing involvement with youth is the Rainbow Youth Group. We offer various training courses such as life-skills, holiday camp training for volunteers and a train the trainer course. We contribute to Youth Day celebrations through drama presentations, and network widely both nationally and internationally.

Activities this past year

180 youth attended a Peace Academy for 5 days. They have now set up 35 peace clubs in schools supported by teachers participated in a return exchange visit to Northern Ireland and 20 attended a Outward bound course. In September a follow up Peace Academy will take place to reflect on progress, further workshops on peace and leadership and planning for the future. We offer the Peace Academy in partnership with the Institute for the Healing of Memories and Peace Jam, an organization that brings a Nobel Laureate each year for workshops with young people. We are exploring a partnership with Public Achievement, an organization which trains university students to act as coaches to the Peace Clubs.

Challenges
We were aware of the peer pressure that our young people face, especially the girls, in relation to unprotected sex. In the face of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, we have to include this information in our programmes, as parents are still uncomfortable talking to their children about sexual topics.

Staff need ongoing development, and ought to participate regularly in courses being offered-they must stay abreast of development in the field, be informed about latest youth trends, and developments in our communities. We also need to participate in building the South African Youth Workers' Association (SAYWA), and network with other youth groups nationally and internationally so that we can help build the capacity of the youth development movement in this country.

Peace Education
Aims
We work towards effective, ongoing peace and education for peace and hope to develop more peaceful schools in which a culture of learning and teaching can thrive. Working with people in education, we provide in service trainiang for educators, and workshops for learners that seek to propagate the values of peace.

Context
Schools are facing difficult challenges in transformation - both educational and social. Confronted with large classes and a critical lack of resources, they are also in the process of implementing a new curriculum and teaching methodology. In an atmosphere of gangsterism and violence, and a lack of training on alternatives to corporal punishment, educators often feel powerless.

Working in an environment where there is a poor culture of learning and teaching, with little support from parents, they have to battle against internal issues such as retrenchments too. These factors lead to lack of commitment, low motivation, and damaged self esteem.

Activities
Most of our peace work is with previously disadvantaged schools, where we try to respond appropriately to each school and area of work - whether through management training in unstructured schools, conflict handling in a context of violence and poor discipline, or prejudice reduction in a school experiencing racial and cultural integration.

We have six distinct strategic areas of work. Through our School Development project, we established partnerships with two schools, working intensively throughout the year with educators and learners. A focus on women in the schools management teams training was well received, while we developed good relations with the Western Cape Education Department Safe Schools Programme through involvement in facilitating their Organisational Development course.

Though short-term interventions have limited impact, they may lead to stronger relationships, so our Mini Schools project continues. Our Curriculum Development project is under review, with the excitement of piloting a life-skills programme in a primary school.

We were disappointed that experiences of people from our Primary School Camp, where educators learn to run camps, and learners acquire conflict resolution skills, were
not sufficiently shared once they got back to school.

Our manual on Conflict Handling is of great benefit, and we wish to have it translated into Afrikaans and Xhosa to make it more accessible to educators. We also intend to compile a manual on Positive Discipline, as this is a topic much needed by schools.

Finally the Phinda Train the Trainer project consumed much energy which was well spent, as participants showed great personal growth and a commitment to changing their schools and communities.

Activities this past year
Margaret Simons visited Switzerland and met some of the Quakers last year. She supports teachers in Schools, trains them as trainers and then supports them as the Peace Educators Association (PEA). The PEA now has a pool of very dedicated teachers who are running their own projects in the schools and local community and are being called on by the education department for assistance. The project has developed a Positive Discipline manual (Corporal punishment was banned in 1994 but teachers have not had alternative methods of discipline and corporal punishment is still often used) which it is piloting for the Education Department

Impact
" The course was creative with lots of meaningful discussion. There was opportunity to hear views from colleagues, positive attitudes, and innovative ideas in handling discipline which affects children and them later as adults.'
Educator of a primary school following a workshop on Positive discipline for classroom management

" I like the way the training focused on real problems and also the way of finding solutions without being prescriptive'
Educator at a school in crisis

" We had a family conflict. I arranged a meeting with everybody concerned. Prior to the meeting I really thought about the following: why it was important for me to sustain the relationship and mend the rift; what I was going to say, how I was going to say it, my reaction to the other party and what I wanted. I learnt a lot from the workshop on Assertiveness and transactional analysis. I used this information and applied the skills during the meeting.'
Paraphrased feedback from a trainee of our Phinda project describing personal growth

Trainees of our Phinda project are now receiving the following feedback from recipients of their own workshops, in the following case a women's group at church:
- I am free to be myself.
- I am discovering myself and the good things in other people.
- I am learning now how to play like a child.
- Working with 40 women, with different ideas and getting them to laugh, talk, discuss, differ, all with respect takes some doing. You were wonderful!
Educator of a secondary school in Atlantis evaluating our facilitation of the course on 'Women, Leadership and Management'.

" Wayne Pedro, a teacher from Bridgetown East Primary School, said he learnt to be more patient with his pupils and to consider their backgrounds when difficult situations arose. According to him children who attended the camp have become more tolerant, responsible, eager to listen and more willing to lead.'
From article in the Cape Times, 17 August 2000, on our camp reunion

" What I was gaining in knowledge and skills was invaluable. When I went through a difficult patch I found an expression which said, 'in order to be successful, you need to be goal-orientated and directed.' I then decided to set goals and to be patient with myself by focusing on the fact that we 'change a little at a time.' I prioritized what I needed to change and applied my energy deliberately and repeatedly to this new course of action.'
Feedback from a trainee of our Phinda project; describing personal growth

" I want to give my heart and soul to the project which I have begun with the women of our church. I have a task to carry out in my community and this is something I intend to see through. '
Trainee of Phinda project describing her commitment to the community project she has initiated

" Having people like you is of great importance. The world is dependent upon you. Please stand up, shake the world. The communities that have already met you are so fortunate'
Gratitude expressed by the principal to facilitators of the Mzamomtsha School Development project

Challenges
Full participation is required in our School Development project, as is follow-up work to our camps and mentoring of educators in the Phinda project. We also need to find strategies for dealing with the emotional demands placed on facilitators in all our long-term projects: encouragement, especially in the early stages of the Schools Development project, follow-up for peace work from the Camps, and mentoring of educators from the Phinda project. In addition, we need more research and structured evaluation of our programmes.

Community Development
Aims
The aims of the project are to facilitate a process of empowerment - with a specific focus on women - where the community fully participates in the eradication of poverty and starvation. Through this relationship we share skills with our clients, and help communities deal with conflicts in a non-violent way.

People come from far away to look for work, and cannot find adequate housing, or food. More and more people cram into densely populated informal settlements. With little or no sanitation, and excessive pollution, infectious diseases such as tuberculosis and cholera can spread rapidly. With large familiesliving in overcrowded conditions, crime, family violence, woman and child abuse are frequent. Economic relief and life-skills for maintaining peace are desperately needed.

Sewing
The sewing project provides basic and advanced sewing courses, and provides workshops in business, marketing, problem-solving and life-skills. People who completed the basic sewing course are trained to make tracksuits, dresses, shorts, and shirts. At the end of their training they were given a start-up pack of material to establish their small businesses in groups. When these become profitable, they come back to take the advanced course which includes pattern-cutting. A new embroidery machine has enabled people to produce traditional dresses that are in great demand.

Gardening
Besides training gardeners in various aspects of agricultural techniques such as compost making, soil preservation, pest control and the production of seedling, the gardening project teaches people how to preserve their produce and some basic business and marketing skills. More than that, gardeners learn community peace skills such as conflict handling, and some also become trainers who can train others in the various skills. Garden committees also receive training so that their members may take on roles as community leaders.

In Khayelitsha, Nyanga. Guguletu and Samora Machel we managed to expand the backyard gardens to 2300, create compost heaps in three areas, trained 36 people in food preservation and trained gardeners in schools such as Luhlaza.

Networks with schools, pre-schools, clinics and other NGOs and CBOs allow us to share information, ideas and experience. From these we hope to extend knowledge of nutrition and environmental awareness, and participate in joint projects.

Activities this past year
We manage three community gardens for approx 200 unemployed people, mostly women. Each garden supports and serves approx 100 back yard gardeners. In addition we train schools, preschools and clinics to set up community gardens.

We are piloting setting up a mediation service at the Nyanga garden. We have trained 20 mediators and initial indications are that it is providing a valuable service-17 cases successfully mediated last month, and it has increases their self esteem greatly- "we used to grow food and now we grow people". We are exploring a partnership with Abalimi Bhezakhaya. and Urban agriculture organization where they will provide the agricultural management and we will provide organizational development, conflict resolution and set up mediation services for community gardens.

Impact
Gardens provide not only nutritious foods, but also extra income from the sales of surplus. Similarly, the sewing project has provided incomes for people. Besides their financial situation improving, people have learnt life-skills such as conflict mediation.

Rural Support
The programme considers peace to be the establishment and the maintenance of economic and social justice, that narrows the gap between the rich and the poor and allows people to live full lives.
Aims
To help people living in the Karoo to enhance the quality of their lives, predominantly through financial sustainability.

Context
Overlaying the pervasive economic deprivation of most people living in the rural areas, is a lack of infrastructure for advancement - sparse populations spread over great distances compound the problems created by a lack of facilities, social issues and attitudes dating back to apartheid. Price increases and withdrawal of existing services and facilities are a threat to people's fragile hold on survival. Now the redrawing of local government boundaries will force people to travel long distances to centres to collect grants when there is no transport. People depend on state grants, and cannot raise loans to start up businesses. With few role models, no training facilities and hardly any organisations, people are caught in a cycle of increasing economic and social poverty.

Activities
Six visits have taken place in the Karoo towns of Leeu-Gamka and Murraysburg, and two to Aberdeen. Business skills workshops were offered as well backup counselling and advice.

In Aberdeen the local employment trading system was discussed with the Aberdeen Small Business Corporation Committee and with members of the Town Council.

Impact
Development is not a commodity which can be transferred from one person to another. It requires dedication from everybody in the partnership. The clients experience the input of the Centre positively, no matter how small. People listen, and they use the meetings to express their concerns and problems. The florist who went through a crisis of depression, feels her strength and creativity coming back. The school leaders and teachers are under constant work pressure, but take the time to explore new ways to revive the T-shirt screen-printing project and to be part of COMBAT, a NGO working in the Karoo. A physically handicapped person has learnt new skills so she will be able to care for herself.

Learning
Rural development needs to start from economic flow on a local level first - a local currency, LETS [Local Exchange Trading System] or another local trading system.

To achieve goals in rural development needs the long-term commitment, dedication and perseverance of local people and of service providers. One of the highest priorities is to help people see themselves as capable and potentially successful by building respect, self-esteem and self-confidence. This would enable a basic condition for sustainable development to be met: it must be driven by the stakeholders.

Challenges
It is imperative to find some model for development in the rural areas that will not leave people with heightened expectations that cannot be met, or are unrealistic.

Activities on additional projects this past year
Peace and Security
Piloting setting up a mediation service with the Community Police Forum in Khayelitsha (to be followed later in the year by one in Mannenburg) which will deal with cases referred by the police and the courts. The training has just started after extensive consultation with the parties involves.

Peace for Development
Offers a conflict handling service for communities involved in development. Currently resolving a conflict and facilitating development for a farming project. 65 people used their state housing subsidies and pooled them to purchase a farm.

Workcamps
Young unemployed youth who have attended a workcamp are trained to lead workcamps. They are leading four workcamps this year for international and local participants. This gives them valuable experience in leadership and organizing for finding jobs and entering the world of work.

Other projects supported
We continue to support a number of projects in a practical way. Gun Free South Africa uses two of our offices, we provide administration support for the Alternative to Violence Project, we are supporting and facilitating the Non-violent Communication Project and we are active participants in the Coalition for Defence Alternatives




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