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Average Rating: 4.67 out of 5 (3 ratings submitted)
Clowns Without Borders South Africa Njabulo HIV/AIDS Residency ProgrammeCountries
Lesotho, South Africa, Swaziland
Programme Summary
Created in 2004, Clowns without Borders South Africa (CWBSA) is a registered non-profit organisation (NPO) based in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN). Implemented by South African artists and teachers, Njabulo HIV/AIDS Residency Programme aims to provide psychosocial relief to both vulnerable children and their caregivers in Southern Africa (South Africa, Lesotho, and Swaziland) who are affected by poverty, disease, and HIV/AIDS. In partnership with community-based organisations (CBOs), the project uses performance, workshops, drama therapy, and professional development to help children and their caregivers develop a sense of emotional well-being and resiliency. Teams of teaching artists and clowns have (as of June 2009) worked with over 170,000 children and caregivers throughout the region. Communication StrategiesClowns Without Borders South Africa connects local facilitating artists with community-based organisations (CBOs) in Southern Africa to provide psychosocial support through edutainment strategies. ("Njabulo" is the Zulu word for "joy and happiness"). This organisation is motivated by the belief that laughter and play have the capacity to improve the psychosocial conditions of those in areas of crisis, and so has developed its own approach that uses play, performance, theatre arts education, drama therapy, mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), and professional empowerment to address the psychosocial needs of children and their caregivers. Organisers explain, "We are really looking at strengthening the relationship between children and their caregivers at home on a daily basis by awakening a sense of play and joy in their lives." This strategy involves the following components:
CWBSA interventions involve the following:
Development IssuesChildren, HIV/AIDS, Health. Key PointsBetween 2004 and 2009, CWBSA sent teams of clowns, teachers and performers to Southern Africa to visit urban and rural communities. As of June 2009, they have performed for more than 170,000 children and adults in community centres, schools, fields, hospitals, and children’s villages. Reflecting on these experiences, CWBSA suggests that “Children between the ages of 6 to 16 and their caregivers receive the most benefit from our interactions and can improve their psycho-social condition over the long term." CWBSA is part of an international humanitarian community Clowns Without Borders - CWB) that provides laughter and emotional relief to children in communities of crisis around the world. Since 1993, chapters from 9 different countries have sent hundreds of expeditions to areas including Sudan, Nepal, Haiti, and Southern Africa. CWB also works to raise awareness of conditions encountered in the field and to promote solidarity between people and cultures. PartnersAfrican Dream Circus (Durban, KZN), Baylor Pediatric Clinic, Malealea Development Trust, Save the Children, Lesotho, Sisters of Charity of Ottawa, Semonkong Community Project (Lesotho), Medecins Sans Frontieres (Lesotho), Lutheran Development Service (Swaziland), Ingwavuma Orphan Care (KZN), Woza Moya Project (Ixopo, KZN), Rob Smetherham Bereavement Service for Children (Elandskop, KZN), Ndolvu AIDS Medical Center, Ramotshinyadi HIV Youth Guide (Limpopo), Emerson School of Storytelling (United Kingdom), Operation Sock Monkey (Canada), Yale University (United States), Cirkus Cirkor (Sweden). ContactClowns Without Borders South Africa (CWBSA)
PO Box 18810
Durban
4014
South Africa
Tel: +27 76 384 9478
SourceCWBSA website; Arti'shake newsletter on January 10 2005; and emails from Jamie McLaren Lachman to The Communication Initiative on April 6 2007, August 6 2007, August 7 2007, and June 15 2009. Placed on the Soul Beat Africa site January 10 2006 Last Updated June 17 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
Broadcast Edutainment
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Clowns withoutBorders
Very illuminating and informative.How can we help as Drama Teachers in Australia?
It is wonderful to know that these people realize that a child is more than a diagnosis and that to heal you need to treat the whole person, not just the body.