Youth support group takes the future into its own hands
Dudu Xaba and Mbali Khumalo from Young Urban Women plan to start a vocational school
Dudu Xaba and Mbali Khumalo both grew up in Orange Farm, outside Johannesburg, but they took different paths to the Young Urban Women movement in which they now passionately advocate more opportunities and a brighter future for the residents of their downtrodden community.
The Young Urban Women group is run at two locations in South Africa, but is represented in several African countries and India. In Gauteng it has two bases, one in the Afrika Tikkun Arekopaneng Community Centre in Orange Farm and the other in the Uthando Centre in central Johannesburg. The programme itself is facilitated and run by Actionaid.
The programme started as an after-school support group in Orange Farm and Johannesburg, providing activities and engagement around issues that the young schoolgirls were experiencing in their personal lives. More recently, it has developed to include young women who have reached school-leaving age, but still need support and networks to thrive.
“Young Urban Women brings together a group of young ladies all looking for a shared safe space to talk about our daily lives, which have been greatly affected by our socioeconomic status. Together we discuss and advocate against social injustices applied by government departments by implementing austerity measures, which often mean budget cuts on the social grants that we depend on,” says Khumalo.
It is essentially a support group that facilitates dialogue and creates bridges between young women who all too often are in competition with each other rather
than respectfully working together for a better future for all.
As part of the Young Urban Women programme, Xaba and Khumalo are on a mission to create a new vocational school in Orange Farm, one that could teach much-needed skills such as plumbing, electrical work, carpentry and boilermaking to unemployed residents.
Seeing how many people come into the IT department at the Africa Tikkun centre every day, they realise that there is a great need, and want, for people to be trained in skills that can make them money while also contributing to the upliftment of the community.
There is so much need for skilled labourers with the ability to run their own businesses that Xaba and Khumalo are sure that a vocational school will be the answer to many of the community’s problems.
“Many young boys and girls drop out of school. They can’t read and write. They are not passionate. A vocational school will decrease crime. There are many young people who want to do something,” says Khumalo.
“Everyone needs a fair chance in life,” Xaba adds. “Let’s break protocols, rules and regulations that the government is putting on us and let us thrive in doing what we want, doing what we are passionate about. There is a young group of women who are pushing, advocating and want to be out there and heard. Not being at the back but being in the front. We have fresh ideas.”
The school isn’t going to come quickly. It will take a lot of hard work to pull all of the necessary parts together, but the Young Urban Women are passionate and well supported. They are starting by involving community members, the local council and other possible stakeholders. In time they want to start the school informally, asking local tradespeople to come and teach their skills to others in the community.
In a country with so much unemployment and infrastructure that is rapidly ageing, it seems like a sensible plan to focus on the jobs that are needed to provide basic needs to the growing population. If it works, they could be creating a blueprint for change all around the country.
“As young people we can collaborate, hold hands and support each other to make things happen,” says Xaba.
This story is one of a series of articles produced by The Actionists to highlight the incredible work of organisations and activists across South Africa in their pursuit of justice and equal rights for all.