From homeless job seeker to budding entrepreneur
Josua Juwele (21) was looking for a job when the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic hit South Africa last year. As a result of the devastating effects of the pandemic, he landed up homeless on the streets of Johannesburg.
But thanks to the help offered by the Gauteng Department of Social Development and the Small Enterprise Development Agency (Seda), Juwele now fixes sofas for a living.
It all started in March 2020, when President Cyril Ramaphosa placed the country in national lockdown.
Juwele, who is originally from Upington in the Northern Cape, had no option but to move out of his friend’s
Randburg home to a homeless shelter as he had no money.
“I lived with my friend since 2018, trying to find a job. He assisted me with money for transport for interviews, but when the country was put in lockdown, I could not impose on him anymore,” he explains
Juwele then heard an announcement from the department on the radio that said homeless people in Gauteng would be offered shelter during the lockdown.
“I stayed at a shelter in Bezuidenhout Valley and moved to Hillbrow in mid-September,” he says.
As part of an exit plan for those at the shelters, Juwele enrolled in the five-day entrepreneurship training programme run by the department and Seda. He was taught how to draw up a business plan and learnt about public relations and customer care.
Juwele later enrolled in an upholstery course that taught him to fix sofas and now plans to register a business. “I am going to start an upholstery shop,” he says.
With money he makes from the shop, Juwele wants to complete his psychology studies at the University of South Africa.
“I want to be a social worker. I have witnessed how proactive and directly involved they are with people at shelters,” he says.
For more information about skills development training programmes, contact the Gauteng Department of Social Development at 011 355 7600 or approach your closest homeless shelter.
with Disabilities Maite Nkoane-Mashabane said the policy is ready for implementation.
She urged government, civil society and the private sector, who are expected to implement the policy, to constantly refer to the document for guidance on the programmes and projects the youth are expecting from the government.
“We are to translate what is contained in the policy document into tangible actions. The policy has promises that represent change the youth of South Africa have been yearning for, for years, to rid themselves from poverty, unemployment and inequality,” she said.
Minister Nkoane-Mashabane said the youth were severely affected by the Coronavirus pandemic and action must be taken to help them secure a brighter future.
“Our role must be to ensure that a young girl moves out of the kitchen to be a decision maker in the board room; a young man stops wandering in the streets of a township and instead goes into gainful employment as a successful entrepreneur, and our youth with disabilities need to instil hope in their able-bodied counterparts,” she said.
The NYP 2030 has five priority areas:
• Quality education, skills and second chances.
• Economic transformation, entrepreneurship and job creation.
• Physical and mental health promotion.
• Social cohesion and nation building.
• Effective and responsive youth development machinery.
For more information on the NYP 2030 or to download the document, go to
www.gov.za