The Mother House - A Future Home for Children

The “Moeder huis” with the soup kitchen in the foreground.

The “Moeder huis” with the soup kitchen in the foreground.

 Our visit to the Sanctuary Land provided the opportunity to witness first-hand the progress being made on the “Moeder Huis” (Mother House). While there’s still considerable work to be done before the building is finished, we are excited and happy with the progress being made on the building. CSN Board members Helge Mercker, Theresa Matengu, Chief Ita, Jeremiah Molestane, Lydia Molestane all agree that finishing the building is the top priority. Toilets, showers, washing/laundry facilities, sewage and electricity are all needed before the children can be placed.

The “Moeder Huis” was designed by volunteer Johan Van Niekerk, a local architect who made several visits to the site to monitor the building’s construction. When completed the building will hold two dormitories, each housing 8 to 10 children and a house mother. The plan includes a boys’ dormitory, a girls’ dormitory, a large meeting room, an office, kitchen, storage area, toilets, showers and laundry area.

Earlier this year, CSNS contributed to the development of the land by purchasing a generator, providing funds for the drilling of the borehole (well), plus 2 water tanks with stand and pipes needed to complete the water supply for the Sanctuary Land. CSNS also contributed some building materials such as cement and paint. CSNS pays the wages for the two employees currently on site; Zuma, the gardener/handyman and Moses the security guard.

CSNS Board Members Diane Mawson and Betty Owen with CSN Board member Helge Mercker and Gardener/Handyman, Zuma pointing to the borehole or well funded by CSNS donors.

CSNS Board Members Diane Mawson and Betty Owen with CSN Board member Helge Mercker and Gardener/Handyman, Zuma pointing to the borehole or well funded by CSNS donors.

Now with water on the land, the development of a garden is underway. In another area not shown, Zuma is developing a garden with indigenous plants. His wages are provided by CSNS donors.

Now with water on the land, the development of a garden is underway. In another area not shown, Zuma is developing a garden with indigenous plants. His wages are provided by CSNS donors.

 

Char, carrots, beets and onions are now growing on the land! The long term goal is for the Sanctuary Land to be as self-sufficient as possible.

Char, carrots, beets and onions are now growing on the land! The long term goal is for the Sanctuary Land to be as self-sufficient as possible.



With the purchase of the water tanks and stand, the water supply to the Sanctuary Land is now complete. Our heart-felt thanks to CSNS donors who made this possible!

With the purchase of the water tanks and stand, the water supply to the Sanctuary Land is now complete. Our heart-felt thanks to CSNS donors who made this possible!

The construction workers enjoying a well deserved “soup kitchen” lunch! Special thanks to CSN Board Member Jeremiah Molestane who oversees the brick making process and the overall progress of the building’s construction.

The construction workers enjoying a well deserved “soup kitchen” lunch! Special thanks to CSN Board Member Jeremiah Molestane who oversees the brick making process and the overall progress of the building’s construction.

Soup kitchen volunteers, Amanda and Meena busy painting one of several rooms in the “Moeder Huis”. The progress of the building brings great hope and inspiration to the volunteers and to many in the community.

Soup kitchen volunteers, Amanda and Meena busy painting one of several rooms in the “Moeder Huis”. The progress of the building brings great hope and inspiration to the volunteers and to many in the community.

Loving care for the children from committed, compassionate volunteers.

Loving care for the children from committed, compassionate volunteers.

Soup kitchen volunteers Lydia and Katrina making bracelets from ostrich shells.

Soup kitchen volunteers Lydia and Katrina making bracelets from ostrich shells.

Moses the Security Guard with a hippo roller used to transport water to his home located outside the fenced area.

Moses the Security Guard with a hippo roller used to transport water to his home located outside the fenced area.

In honour of our visit, Chief Ita invited elders from the community to the Sanctuary Land for daily healing/prayer circles which were held following the meals for the children.

In honour of our visit, Chief Ita invited elders from the community to the Sanctuary Land for daily healing/prayer circles which were held following the meals for the children.

It was a great privilege to sit in circle with these dear souls, to hear their songs, prayers and stories. It was wonderful to see several children be drawn to the circles and to become an integral part of them.

It was a great privilege to sit in circle with these dear souls, to hear their songs, prayers and stories. It was wonderful to see several children be drawn to the circles and to become an integral part of them.

Chief Ita with her wonderful group of soup kitchen volunteers, CSNS Board members Diane, Helge, Betty and Judy in the back row. All working together in harmony on a shared vision for the orphaned and vulnerable children!

Chief Ita with her wonderful group of soup kitchen volunteers, CSNS Board members Diane, Helge, Betty and Judy in the back row. All working together in harmony on a shared vision for the orphaned and vulnerable children!

 

A Visit to the Sanveld Kindergarten

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One of the highlights of our trip to Drimiopsis in August was visiting the Sanveld Kindergarten. We were invited to spend three mornings at the Kindergarten where we enjoyed a real “hands-on” experience with the staff and children. CSNS enjoys a special relationship with the Kindergarten as our Society funds its daily food program. CSNS Board Member Diane Mawson teaches Kindergarten in North Vancouver, BC and her class is a “buddy class” with Sanveld Kindergarten. We were delighted to bring a variety of books, games and other teaching resources to the school and enjoyed introducing some of the new resources to the staff and students.

Below, we received a very warm welcome by the teachers at the school and were immediately impressed by their commitment and caring for the students.

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CSNS Board Member & Kindergarten teacher, Diane Mawson introducing new books & puzzles to the class.

CSNS Board Member & Kindergarten teacher, Diane Mawson introducing new books & puzzles to the class.

CSNS Board member and teacher, Judy Dunbar, introduces a new bingo game to the students and to their teacher and CSN Board Member, Lydia Molestane.

CSNS Board member and teacher, Judy Dunbar, introduces a new bingo game to the students and to their teacher and CSN Board Member, Lydia Molestane.

The children appeared to enjoy their new books.

The children appeared to enjoy their new books.

Some children playing a soccer game during recess.

Some children playing a soccer game during recess.

The children wash their hands before entering their class for a meal.

The children wash their hands before entering their class for a meal.

Mealtime in the Kindergarten.

Mealtime in the Kindergarten.

Anna, the cook prepares the children’s meal (eg: oatmeal, pap, lentils, bread & peanut butter) in an outdoor kitchen behind the kindergarten building. CSNS funds two meals daily, 5 days a week for the Kindergarten students.

Anna, the cook prepares the children’s meal (eg: oatmeal, pap, lentils, bread & peanut butter) in an outdoor kitchen behind the kindergarten building. CSNS funds two meals daily, 5 days a week for the Kindergarten students.

The teachers washing dishes after school.

The teachers washing dishes after school.

Lydia Molestane invited us to join her life skills group for teenaged girls. This group is a unique resource for young girls in Drimiopsis and takes place in the kindergarten building.

Lydia Molestane invited us to join her life skills group for teenaged girls. This group is a unique resource for young girls in Drimiopsis and takes place in the kindergarten building.


 

 

Hippo Rollers for Carrying Water

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Generous donations over the past Christmas season made it possible for CSNS to ship an additional 10 hippo rollers to Drimiopsis in March 2019. The shipment was made at the request of CSN. Hippo rollers make the task of collecting water much less strenuous than traditional methods. Each roller holds 5 x more water than a typical bucket and the water is moved by simply rolling it along the ground.

 An initial shipment of 10 hippo rollers was sent to Drimiopsis two years ago and these have been very well used by the Kindergarten staff, by the workers and volunteers on the Sanctuary land, and by several elders. With the drilling of the borehole and installation of the water tanks on the Sanctuary Land, CSN does not anticipate a need for additional hippo rollers in the future. CSNS is deeply grateful to the Hippo Roller Foundation and to the other generous donors who made the purchase of the hippo rollers possible.

CSN relied upon Chief Ita’s guidance to determine the distribution of the hippo rollers. Below are some of the elders who received a hippo roller for their use.

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Pops for Namibia


Board Members Holding Fundraiser Cheque

From left: Betty Owen, Judy Dunbar, Helge Mercker, Diane Mawson, Terry Adler

On behalf of the Kindergarten class and their Grade 7 Buddies at Canyon Heights Elementary School I would like to thank Helge (from CSN) for her inspiring and informational slide presentation on Oct. 18, 2018.  The slides she showed gave us a close look at the San people and culture that we couldn’t have gained in any other way. With Helge’s prompting the students realized that the profit from the sale of one popsicle, $1.00 CAD, feeds ten Kindergarten students two meals a day in Drimiposis.

We were pleased to present a cheque for six hundred dollars to the CSNS members present, Terry, Judy, Betty and Helge. The money was raised by selling Fruit popsicles in September.  Our students are inspired to share the information about Drimiopsis with the rest of the school and to continue their fundraising efforts for CSNS.

 

Diane Mawson,

Kindergarten Teacher,

Canyon Heights Elementary School,

North Vancouver, BC

Children at Canyon Heights Presentation

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Freedom Through Service - A New Board Member's Perspective

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The CSNS Board: (From Left) Betty Owen, Treasurer; Ellen Besso, Vice-President; Terry Adler, President; Diane Mawson, Board Member at Large; Judy Dunbar, Secretary; (Front) Helge Mercker, CSNS Agent & CSNS & Children’s Sanctuary Namibia Board Member

Many years ago in Ontario, I was treated by a Naturopath-Chiropractor, a divorced, middle aged man, father of two. This quirky, opinionated man fell in love with a beautiful young woman and together they had a baby, to the amazement of everyone who knew him.  One day Richard told me that he had found freedom through commitment to his new wife and babe, a concept foreign to me at the time.

Yesterday morning I opened Sharon McErlane’s newsletter from The Great Council of Grandmothers, (netoflight.org), entitled What Service Will Do For You. Service is freedom and service brings freedom,” the Grandmothers said. “Loving service is powerful.  “Connecting with others in the light”, they go on to say, our limitations begin to melt and our energy shifts.

Western volunteers we met in India echoed our sentiments, that we all get back much more than we give to the Tibetans we help in Dharamshala. The same goes for our work with displaced Tibetans and Syrian refugees here at home, and now my volunteer work with the newly founded Canadian Children’s Sanctuary Namibia Society.

Recently we held our first AGM followed by a General Meeting and were privileged to have Helge, our Namibian Agent, and a member of both the Canadian and Namibian Boards, with us. Though my energy was flagging near the end of an intense day, Helge immediately riveted my attention when she began speaking about her experiences in Drimiopsis, the settlement where the orphaned and at risk San children subsist in neglect and poverty.

I have observed abject poverty on my Indian travels and have become inured to it to a degree, in order to continue visiting that country. However Helge managed to paint a visceral picture of the lives of the children and teachers in the Drimiopsis settlement, one that penetrated my privileged, safe, white Canadian mentality.

Listening to this gentle, spiritual white woman speak lovingly about her work with the children opened my heart and moved me deeply. Helge spoke about how she slowly, over a number of years, encouraged and helped the teachers and other supporters of the San people, re-settled in Drimiopsis, Namibia in 1991, to begin rebuilding their community, starting with food and water security, education for children and employment opportunities for adults.

Helge happily reported that the CSN Board and key community members have made great strides by taking ownership of development efforts by starting the brick building project that to date has produced 12,000 bricks, working with a volunteer architect to design the first Sanctuary building and hiring a security guard to safeguard the supplies needed for both the building and the protective fencing for the site.

I am proud to have the opportunity to offer my service and skills to this community as a member of our dedicated CSNS team.

Love & Light

Ellen