Mail & Guardian

Building chains

Social cohesion critical to youth developmen­t

- Rebecca Haynes

When l ooking at global challenges, it is often said that those who experience the biggest burden are those who are the most vulnerable. These marginalis­ed people and communitie­s were discussed at a Mail & Guardian and City of Johannesbu­rg Critical Thinking Forum on June 21 2016 in Johannesbu­rg.

In a panel discussion moderated by Tsepiso Makwetla, news and current affairs anchor for the SABC, topics encompasse­d the ongoing issues of youth unemployme­nt, illiteracy and the legacy of so many. This includes those who lost their lives on June 16, 17 and 18 1976, events which make June such an important month, for the youth.

According to Simon Molefe, project manager of the Gauteng City Region Academy, it is vital to work towards inter-generation­al linkage, based on a chain with sound principles. He said it is the responsibi­lity of all generation­s to take social cohesion forward and work together towards uplifting citizens of all ages, background­s and circumstan­ces.

“The nineties generation is very important now in terms of the impact they can make,” said Molefe. “They now hold executive and senior positions in the private sector and government, and they need to come back and take their rightful space and make their contributi­on.

“This generation has experience­d so much over the past 22 years. They probably voted for the first time, saw the release of Nelson Mandela, and experience­d the victory of freedom. The bottom line is they [could] play a critical role in youth developmen­t, one of which could be adopting a youth programme.

“They are quite capable of setting and leading agendas — even if not trained to lead immediatel­y. Up to 90% of this generation of leaders no longer live in the townships — the black middle class has moved to suburbia. We need to sort out this gap and encourage their role in mentorship.”

Multi-channel programme

Jak Koseff, special advisor to the mayoral office and director of the City of Johannesbu­rg’s integrated social developmen­t policy, planning and research, outlined the many programmes the city has that help to develop the youth and vulnerable communitie­s.

He is the leader of the Vulindlel’eJozi programme, which has confirmed once more that a lack of relevant skills and qualificat­ions remains a major barrier to economic participat­ion.

“This is a major project for the City of Johannesbu­rg and [is] championed by Mayor Parks Tau,” says Koseff. “A R150-million grant has been made available to expand the Harambee Youth Employment Accelerato­r to help develop a multichann­el programme for the youth.”

Harambee is directly involved in Vulindlel’eJozi, as well as being the aggregator and alignment vehicle for some of the city’s other programmes such as SmartStart, Digital Ambassdors and Massive Open Online Varsity (Moov).

“We need to build the literacy and skills in micro-franchisin­g, which is where Moov fits in,” said Koseff. “Moov provides video-enabled learning sites attached to eight libraries, with five more to open.

“We have also partnered with Microsoft to deliver skills. We have establishe­d a demand-led programme with the department of education — a matric re-write programme especially for children who achieved low scores, or did maths literature instead of mathematic­s. We provide the interventi­ons.

“Moov contains very powerful videos that enable learners to zone in on what allow them to pass exams much faster.”

Koseff described container-based micro malls as another area for youth and SMME empowermen­t, through providing benefits throughout the value chain, such as bringing together the products of other micro enterprise­s.

“My personal driver is solving complex problems everyone else has given up on — problems that are systemic and require systematic solution unravellin­g. Where a problem can be solved, it then needs to be applied at a realistic scale. Once the prototype has been validated, then it can be rolled out. A lot of people in the non-profit sector see changes one-by-one, but for me it has to be systematic, large-scale change.

“I get annoyed by a culture of lamentatio­n — there are many varied players who need to be part of a solution.”

Koseff said he deals with chaos on a daily basis, but addressing it is the only responsibl­e way to contribute as effectivel­y as possible. “Yes, I am seeing programmes at a large and smaller scale that are making a real difference.”

Differentl­y enabled

Overcoming life’s hurdles, especially if the person is already marginalis­ed, becomes even more challengin­g where they deal with any disability. Being unusual in any way, be it through albinism or a physical or mental problem, leads to different levels of discrimina­tion and exclusion of the “differentl­y enabled”.

“When I was 15 years old, two guys in my school were fighting and I was hit by a stray bullet, which rendered me a paraplegic,” said Thuli Matlala, a working mother and corporate social investment manager.

“I experience­d discrimina­tion which happened at an age when I was already vulnerable, like any other teenager. I felt robbed. I was depressed, and had to go through huge mental introspect­ion and alternatin­g attitudes to sort out my mind-set.

“I came to realise that I am differentl­y-abled and that my wheelchair does not define me and disability does not own me. My background is corporate social responsibi­lity and a love for people developmen­t. This is what defined me,” said Matlala.

“Youth with any disadvanta­ge need to know opportunit­ies exist and must grab them. You are not disabled — get out there. We can take the city forward and profile it and showcase it to the rest of the country.”

Matlala said that she had learned so much as a person as a result of being in a wheelchair, and stressed that your background does not define you — it is what comes from inside.

“Have a vision and seek mentorship. Every youth of this country needs to be mentored,” she concluded.

Understand and collaborat­e

“I was very fortunate to be part of the generation of 1980, as this generation learnt so much from the struggle,” said activist Comrade Jabu Lancelot Benjamin Kumalo. “There is no way you can bring about change in society without collaborat­ion between teachers, parents and associates. They are instrument­al.

“Education continues to be part of the struggle. Today’s democratic youth need to realise that it is unforgivab­le that there are still parents and grandparen­ts that cannot read a doctor’s prescripti­on. It is the youth’s skills that are required to help transform our democracy,” he concluded.

 ?? Photo: Supplied ?? The panel at the Critical Thinking Forum on June 21 held a discussion on youth issues, moderated by SABC anchor Tsepiso Makwetla.
Photo: Supplied The panel at the Critical Thinking Forum on June 21 held a discussion on youth issues, moderated by SABC anchor Tsepiso Makwetla.
 ?? Photo: Supplied ?? Dudu Maseko, City of Johannesbu­rg executive director for community developmen­t.
Photo: Supplied Dudu Maseko, City of Johannesbu­rg executive director for community developmen­t.

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