News



CHALLENGES FACED BY ORPHANS & UNDERPRIVILLED YOUTH IN

SOUTH AFRICA THE CONTEXT OF OUR

WORK

Over the past decade, the number of youth & vulnerable children  living in South

Africa has been escalating at an alarming rate. In 2024, the number of orphans had

alarming grown.Over one million of those children have lost their parents to HIV/AIDS-

related complications and suffer the following problems that challenged us to start up a

stretching hand to the orphans, vulnerable,needy  children and youth in South Africa:

Many of these children are deprived of their basic needs due to high levels of poverty.

Nearly half of the population lives below the poverty line, out of which 19% are children.

South Africa rural areas in particular struggle with a very high poverty rate.

Caucasian male volunteer teaching in orphanage in Kenya. There is no light and electricity inside the classroom. Around 20-30 orphans live in this orphanage which is located near Nairobi.

After their parents die or become disabled by illness, orphans and vulnerable children as

young as five years old become both mother and father to their younger siblings. Those

whose parents suffer from HIV/AIDS face an additional burden of care as complications

develop and worsen over time. Children are forced to drop out of school as they try and

provide necessities for their siblings.


Orphans have to find work wherever they can due to their lack of education and

resources: laboring in fields, tending cattle, carrying water, or other back-breaking tasks.

When they can find work, orphans are often paid unfair wages because they have no

alternative but to accept whatever is given. When there is no work, they must beg for or

steal food to ward off starvation. Survival becomes a daily struggle.

Exploitation:

Living in extreme poverty without the support of their parents, orphans are vulnerable to

additional kinds of exploitation. Neighbors and occasionally relatives can take advantage

of them because they know that there is no longer an adult to enforce the children’s

property rights. Orphans are also vulnerable to physical abuse. These children are

beaten and sometimes mutilated after they are driven by hunger to steal small amounts

of food to eat. Girls are subject to sexual exploitation when they face the hard choice of selling their bodies for food or watching their families go hungry.

Many of these children live in communities where there are widespread misconceptions

about the causes of HIV/AIDS. After their parents die from HIV/AIDS-related

complications, they are shunned by neighbors and community members for fear of

catching the disease. Orphans find themselves isolated within their communities,

surrounded by those who are unwilling or unable to reach out to them.

It was while facing these serious issues that Given Mango Foundation was formed.


We believe that every one of our children must be exposed to at least six core

competencies that we consider necessary to excel in this world today:

1. Ethics and integrity

2. Entrepreneurship

3. Spiritual development

4. ICT

5. Environmental Literacy

6. Talent development.

As we embark on  Nhlanhla Zwane Foundation becoming a first-class children’s center, it

will be our commitment to provide these core competencies to all those who will emerge.

from it.

Child advocacy and community outreach.

This covers all interventions to empower children in especially difficult circumstances. It

aims at encouraging commitment and action from the community to empower children /

young people.


We will work towards implementing:

 Counselling, child recovery, and reunification with their families

 Advocacy for children through media coverage

 Child care and protection

 Skills development for young people

 Maternal and child health care

 Parental education on good child care

 Teaching parental skills, parental guidance, encouraging parental literacy, and

cultural identity

 Equipment for children’s activities

 Monitoring and evaluation of the above

   Food parcels distribution

Community Nurse talking to three teenage girls in an informal settlement, Stellenbosch South Africa. She is

Error: Contact form not found.