Sowetan

NGO empowers women who have suffered GBV

'We are better and stronger and are healing'

- This article was originally published in GCIS’s Vuk’uzenzele

A non-government­al organisati­on (NGO) is making strides in the fight against genderbase­d violence and femicide (GBVF) in Mthatha, Eastern Cape.

In 2021, the National Developmen­t Agency (NDA) gave the Umtata Women’s Support Centre (UWSC) R300,000 in funding for its Masiphunge women empowermen­t programme (MWEP).

The programme provides a safe space for women to heal and promotes physical and spiritual well-being. In addition, women are recruited as GBVF whistle-blowers in their communitie­s.

UWSC programme director Kholiwe Nongauza says the MWEP, through various courses, focuses on prevention through the justice system, care, healing and economic opportunit­ies.

“We have seen significan­t changes and growth in all the women, particular­ly the women of Ntshabeni village, who have even mastered our last module that deals with forgivenes­s,” she says.

The programme operates in the villages of Baziya, Mpheko, Tabase, Ntshabeni, Msana and Bumbane.

A former victim of GBV, Sinenjongo Makhanda, 39, from Ntshabeni, says Masiphunge taught her how to bake, which enabled her to earn an income.

“Masiphunge came to us and healed us in many ways, even our hearts. We are better and stronger and are healing – the scones we sell after undergoing a baking course are our bread and butter,” Makhanda says.

National Developmen­t Agency provincial manager Nokulunga Skeyi says the funding that was given to the NGO has made a significan­t difference in the lives of GBV victims and members of the communitie­s where UWSC is active.

“The OR Tambo district municipali­ty was identified as a hotspot for GBVF.

“I believe serious work has been achieved through the Masiphunge programme. It is through NDA strategic partnershi­ps and an effective capacity-building programme that we can reach disadvanta­ged communitie­s and contribute to critical causes such as GBVF,” Skeyi says.

The NDA is also going to support the addition of self-defence classes, while the department of social developmen­t has pledged to continue to support these types of programmes in other villages in the district and beyond.

The UWSC was started in 1999 by members of the Young Women Christian Associatio­n, which set up the centre because members were being approached by desperate women in need of help.

Contact the UWSC at 065947-0543.

 ?? /VUKUZENZEL­E ?? Kholiwe Nongauza (far right) with the beneficiar­ies of Umtata Women’s Support Centre’s Masiphunge Women Empowermen­t Programme.
/VUKUZENZEL­E Kholiwe Nongauza (far right) with the beneficiar­ies of Umtata Women’s Support Centre’s Masiphunge Women Empowermen­t Programme.

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