Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

NOËLLA COURSARIS MUSUNKA: MODEL CITIZEN

- OMESHNIE NAIDOO

THE Congo, as portrayed in author Joseph Conrad’s Heart of

Darkness published in 1899, is desolate.

It’s a difficult read, especially for those of us who live on the continent. And while there have been many other works by African writers about Africa in response, it took a model to help me lift the defeated feeling that literature of that nature lets linger.

Noëlla Coursaris Musunka is lithe.

Her personalit­y bubbles over her petite frame.

She manifests inner strength. Musunka was born in the Congo. At the age of 5, when her father died, her mother sent her to relatives in Europe.

She longed for her mother and vowed to return home.

When she eventually did, she found numerous siblings. The pang of hurt was quickly followed by the realisatio­n that her mother, living in poverty, didn’t know any better.

“From that moment I was determined to help educate Congolese girls,” Musunka said.

“However, when you want to build a school in these parts, you have to first build a well.

It’s not just about putting up classrooms. There is no infrastruc­ture in the rural areas. There is no water.

“Women and girls are tasked making the trip to fetch water – an exhausting dangerous chore that robs them of a chance to learn or work.”

When we meet, Musunka shows me pictures of the school she set up in the village of Kalebuka in 2011 situated in the south-eastern region of the Congo. To date, 314 girls have received an education.

There are more than 17 wells there now and the community thrives – thanks to the school.

In Belgium, Musunka studied business management, but her unique features garnered her a career in photograph­ic modelling. She has appeared in Vanity Fair and Vogue.

She most recently collaborat­ed with fashion designer, Roksanda, and The Outnet, to launch an exclusive clothing collection with proceeds supporting Malaika.

Musunka, a mother of two, was named one of the BBC’s 100 most Influentia­l and Inspiratio­nal Women of 2017 and is an award-recipient from the House of Mandela at the Nelson Mandela centenary celebratio­n.

Since 2017, she has served as ambassador for The Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculos­is, and Malaria.

Although she continues to model, her focus is on the young girls – any one of which could have been her.

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 ??  ?? INTERNATIO­NAL model Noëlla Coursaris Musunka is using her global platform to promote human rights in Africa. Her non-profit organisati­on consists of a school providing quality education to 314 girls; a community centre for 7 000 people; and a clean water programme that provides more than 30 000 people a year with fresh water.
INTERNATIO­NAL model Noëlla Coursaris Musunka is using her global platform to promote human rights in Africa. Her non-profit organisati­on consists of a school providing quality education to 314 girls; a community centre for 7 000 people; and a clean water programme that provides more than 30 000 people a year with fresh water.
 ??  ?? At the school, daily classes taught in French and English, on subjects including STEM, informatio­n technology, health, and civic
education. Each student receives two healthy meals a day.
At the school, daily classes taught in French and English, on subjects including STEM, informatio­n technology, health, and civic education. Each student receives two healthy meals a day.

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