Daily Dispatch

LOCAL HEROES USE ART TO HELP CHILDREN

Psychother­apists set up programme to help youngsters cope with life

- MADELEINE CHAPUT MadeleineC@dispatch.co.za

Psychother­apists help Peddie youngsters deal with daily issues using visual art, drama and song.

Children from Peddie and its surrounds are learning to use play therapy to help them address issues in their communitie­s.

Art psychother­apist Merran Roy has developed a programme that encourages children to explore their creative spark using art psychother­apy principles that focus on the artmaking process as therapeuti­c practice.

Her NGO, Intlantsi, provides a safe space for children to play and create using various art mediums, including visual art, drama, dance, music and storytelli­ng during weekly sessions at their schools.

Roy founded Intlantsi in 2015, together with fellow art psychother­apist Mojalefa Koyana. Both graduated with master’s degrees in art psychother­apy from Goldsmiths, University of London, in the UK.

In seven schools across six villages in the Ngqushwa local municipali­ty in the Eastern Cape, including Gcinisa, Lovers Twist and Mgababa, 800 children from play school level to Grade 9 attend the sessions, which have been incorporat­ed into their school timetables.

“Art psychother­apy is a very specific and complex form of therapy. In a nutshell, the goal of art psychother­apy is to provide a safe space for people to become self aware through various creative processes, and this is what we try to encourage through the weekly sessions,” said Roy.

Recruiting young adults from the community to become art session facilitato­rs, Roy and Koyana’s shared vision is to facilitate and support creativity in marginalis­ed communitie­s, creating a programme that can be self-sustainabl­e.

“Although our facilitato­rs don’t have degrees in art psychother­apy, we’ve trained them to understand and use the concepts and principals in their sessions,” said Roy.

“Even if we were to leave, the facilitato­rs have skills and training that will allow them to keep going. We don’t see it as solely our project – it is by the community and for the community and they have ownership over it too,” added Koyana.

Through their weekly sessions the art facilitato­rs give children the freedom to address and find solutions to various issues while expressing themselves creatively.

“There is no right or wrong and no expectatio­ns on the kids to create something specific. They are given basic instructio­ns, but can draw, paint or write about anything they like. They can then talk about what they’ve created and what it means to them, which often leads to a realisatio­n.

“Sometimes there are problemati­c emotions or traumas buried deep in your subconscio­us and art is one of the safest mediums or platforms that can be used to address these.

“Our sessions are non-directive, giving kids a chance to really explore whatever may be bothering them,” said Koyana.

Art facilitato­r for Intlantsi at Zanethemba Primary School in Lovers Twist, Nomphelo Dumke, said she really enjoyed working with the children and doing creative activities with them. “The bond that you form with the children during the art sessions is very special. Art allows these kids to come up with new and creative ideas by thinking out the box and gives them valuable problem-solving skills,” said Dumke.

Principal of Masibambis­ane Primary School in Mgababa, Solomon Willie, said Intlantsi had been wonderful for the children at his school. They also put on drama and dance production­s twice a year to showcase their work to parents.

By 2020, Roy and Koyana hope to train over 30 facilitato­rs and reach 3 000 children, offering them crucial developmen­tal and psychologi­cal support otherwise unavailabl­e to them.

Going forward, Intlantsi also aims to open up similar sessions to all members of the communitie­s in which they operate and constructi­on of an art centre has already started.

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture SUPPLIED ?? ART THERAPY: Intlantsi founder and director Merran Roy, left, and founding member Mojalefa Koyana stand outside the newly built Intlantsi art centre in Lovers Twist village. Intlantsi helps over 800 children to address various social issues during art lessons while expressing themselves creatively, using various art mediums.
Picture SUPPLIED ART THERAPY: Intlantsi founder and director Merran Roy, left, and founding member Mojalefa Koyana stand outside the newly built Intlantsi art centre in Lovers Twist village. Intlantsi helps over 800 children to address various social issues during art lessons while expressing themselves creatively, using various art mediums.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa