Daily Maverick

Jobs NGO gives youth a boost

Young people in a Gqeberha township get help to redo matric, find a job or start a business. By Estelle Ellis

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As you enter Gqeberha-based NGO Masifunde’s Entreprene­ur Incubator there is a big blackboard on which young people can write down their goals. It is called the “Goal Wall 2024”.

Passing matric, getting a job as a cleaner, a sound producer, an administra­tive assistant or a nurse, and getting into university to become a psychologi­st are some of the goals young people have written down.

“When they reach their goal ... we wipe it off the board,” said Sipuxolo Toni, head of postschool programmes at Masifunde, “and add it to our successes.”

So far this year they have placed 20 people in jobs, one is at university, 21 have rewritten matric and 67 have completed their “get ahead” course. And though the facilitato­rs at the centre know exactly how hard it is to find a job, they are firm believers that it can be done.

They are here for the young people in the Walmer Township community, whether they want to write matric, get a job or start a business.

“Walmer Township has low-income households with more than six people in an informal house. There is a lack of financial, physical and mental space,” said Siyanda Mhlom, a youth support agent for further education at the centre. “We don’t separate them from where they are coming from. We are at the centre of the township. We have a reciprocal relationsh­ip... We protect them and they protect us. We don’t just provide; we give you the tools. We are not the saviours of the township. We are empowering the community.”

Mhlom said it is a battle to complete schooling in most township schools as many learners are barred from writing matric exams because their marks are too low. The centre helps learners to complete the Department of Education’s Second Chance matric programme.

“The main aim of our programme is to help young people be employable,” Toni said. “We work on self-motivation and goal setmpumie

ting. We help them write a CV ... we have mock interviews with them, [show them] how to get an email address and tax numbers, all the basics.”

The centre also offers courses in project management, basic computer literacy, basic finance management to upskill them so they can navigate the workplace, and vocational training for administra­tors, gardeners, baristas, chefs, maintenanc­e trainees, cleaning trainees and hospitalit­y trainees. “If they want a job, we help them look for work, we show them how to find opportunit­ies ... how to go door to door,” Toni said.

Speaking at a “Spark Change” lunch, hosted by Masifunde, economist and teacher Prof Noluntu Dyubhele from Nelson Mandela University said unemployme­nt should not be described as a “government problem”. “It does not belong to the government,” she said. “When we discuss unemployme­nt it must not be a blame game. It must start with you as a job seeker.”

She said the power of entreprene­urs starting their own businesses to fight unemployme­nt is vastly underestim­ated. “People are not taking it seriously.”

For the entreprene­urs who want to start their own businesses, Masifunde also offers a programme, shop space and a bookkeeper.

Abongile Davani is the youth support agent for entreprene­urship.

“Young people are already driving the kasi economy,” he said. “But they work in their rooms or in their back yards. We want to give them their own shops to expand their business... We want to grow the kasi economy that was started by our mothers and grandmothe­rs who were selling fat cakes on the sidewalk,” he said. “We have young, vibrant people.”

The centre also offers a general shop where artists and entreprene­urs can sell merchandis­e.

“Young people are tired of waiting,” Davani said. “They want to do things themselves. People are tired of dialogues about things that do not go where they are supposed to go. It is a structural problem.”

Adam opened Plus Size Innovation a few weeks ago at the incubator.

“It started with me. I always struggled to find clothes that fit me well and made me feel beautiful. I was watching tutorials and teaching myself to sew and practising on my own. It was not easy at first.”

She said when she saw an ad on social media about space being available at the incubator she grabbed the opportunit­y.

“It is much better being here than working from home. The future is looking bright.”

Adam makes three outfits a day. “When I started, my outfits never had pockets but my clients came back and told me: Sisi, please put in some pockets for us. Suggestion­s like that have helped me grow,” she said.

Buzwe Ngcayisa is an establishe­d visual arts teacher but also has a space at the incubator where he does his pottery. He serves as a mentor and a teacher to the other young entreprene­urs.

“My family is from here – there is a street named after my grandfathe­r. I have been longing to do something for the community and work with young ones,” he said. “But here in my shop space I can also tell my own story. A lot of young people passing through come to ask me to learn about ceramic art,” he said.

Ncebakazi Xuma opened her store, Ncesh Beading Craft, at the incubator as well. A selftaught beading artist, she originally learnt her craft by watching Youtube videos but later went to check with a woman who did beadwork to see if she was doing it right.

“I am proud of my business,” she said. It used to be online but now she can showcase her work in her own shop.

“Everyone can now come to see my work. It is also not safe to have people coming to your home.”

Phelelani Makinana joined Izandla Zethu in 2019 as a Masifunde learner. The Izandla Zethu programme trains learners to make jewellery from the corrugated sheets of old shacks and copper obtained from scrapyard dealers. Today she is the project facilitato­r.

Makinana said she offers Grade 9 pupils jewellery-making because not everyone is equipped to learn academical­ly.

“We give these learners ... the belief that they can do this,” she said.

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 ?? Photos: Joyrene Kramer ?? Mpumie Adam from Plus Size Innovation; Siyanda Mhlom, a youth support agent from Masifunde Entreprene­ur Incubator; the wall where young people can write their goals; Buzwe Ngcayisa at his potter’s wheel; Inset: Ncebakazi Xuma from Ncesh Beading Craft; Bottom right: Prof Noluntu Dyubhele from Nelson Mandela University.
Photos: Joyrene Kramer Mpumie Adam from Plus Size Innovation; Siyanda Mhlom, a youth support agent from Masifunde Entreprene­ur Incubator; the wall where young people can write their goals; Buzwe Ngcayisa at his potter’s wheel; Inset: Ncebakazi Xuma from Ncesh Beading Craft; Bottom right: Prof Noluntu Dyubhele from Nelson Mandela University.

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