CSN Hosts the International Day of the African Child

In June, the Manager of the Sanctuary, Belinda Tsuses, was approached by the Namibian Ministry of Gender to host the African Child’s Day Celebration. It was a great success with over 500 children, as well as the Governor of the region, senior social workers from the Omaheke Region and officials from the Ministry of Education in attendance.

The event provided wonderful exposure for the CSN Sanctuary and the Board is hopeful it will lead to increased awareness and support from the government. Our heartfelt gratitude goes out to the CSN Board Members, the staff and volunteers who worked hard to ensure this was a wonderful, memorable event for all.

The Ministry of Gender paid for the food and snacks for the dignitaries, CSN workers and children. It was a lively celebration which included singing, dancing, and speeches as well as food for all.

Over 500 children attended the celebration!

What is the International Day of the African Child?

This event is held every year on June 16. Its aim is to commemorate the SOWETO children’s uprising of 1976, during which thousands of South African students protested the apartheid government’s use of Afrikaans as their language of instruction in Bantu schools. The uprising resulted in the deaths of hundreds of students and is considered a turning point in the struggle against apartheid.

Today, the Day of the African Child is an opportunity to celebrate the realization of the rights of the African child, in line with the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child. The purpose is also to raise awareness of the challenges that children face. The theme for 2023 is “The rights of the Child in the Digital Environment”.

President's Report for AGM by Terry Adler

Welcome friends, to our fourth Annual General Meeting for our Children’s Sanctuary Namibia Society! Thank you for joining us and thank you for all the ways you supported CSNS last year. Some of you have been donors since we were first registered as a charity in 2018. Your loyal, generous support has made possible what we are reporting on today.

The start of 2022 was also the start of a new life for 16 of the most at-risk children in Drimiopsis. The building erected in 2021 was made habitable in January and February of 2022 by installing water pipes, toilets, showers, electrical wiring and so on. Supplies needed were purchased or donated, including furniture, appliances, cooking and kitchen utensils, bedding, hygiene items, cleaning supplies and clothes for the children. A medicine cabinet was built and stocked according to a list created by a pharmacist friend of Helge. Zuma and Johannes created and painted a playground with funds donated by CSNS.

 By February of 2022, Helge had hired a manager, Belinda Tsuses, who moved into the house with her two school age children. Belinda immediately set to work, guided by CSN board member Lazarus Musambani. Because of his many years running a residential care home for orphaned children and dealing with the Ministries involved, he is an invaluable teacher and mentor for Belinda and the house mothers. Lazarus was entrusted by the Ministry to choose which of the more than 70 children requiring a home would be the first to move in. By March, the house was ready, the kitchen full of food, the children’s dressers full of clothes, all preparations made for the move in day of March 7th.

At first the children were apprehensive, as this was a huge step into the unknown. Very soon, they began to feel safe and to thrive, responding to the loving care of dedicated caregivers. For the first time in their young lives, they have health care, support with their schooling, enjoy celebrations for their birthdays and holidays, and are learning their cultural heritage from Grandmother Ita. As you heard Sonja say, they each have a bed to call their own, 3 nutritious meals a day, a home and a family to return to after school.

 The fund-raising strategies you supported in 2022 included a house concert, a plant sale, birthday appeals, a Christmas appeal, the sale of popsicles at Canyon Heights Elementary School and Giving Tuesday. It is amazing when you realize these humble efforts raised enough money to change the course of these children’s lives.

 In this current year of 2023, we continue to support CSN to enrich the lives of these children, and the many children still awaiting the security of their own home. Our primary objectives continue to be the support of the Mother House, the Food Programs and the garden expansion.

 We aim to help CSN to:

1) create a citrus orchard,

2) Buy fertilizer and seeds to grow crops including carrots, spinach, onions, cabbage, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, beets, squash, corn and melons.

3) Grow excess food to sell to community members, enriching their nutrition and generating income to make the garden self-sustaining

4) Expand the garden and purchase shade netting to protect the plants during the intensely hot summers to ensure nutritious crops to supplement the children’s meals year-round, at the Mother House, the kindergarten, and the soup kitchen.

5) Provide the operational costs for the MH, including salaries, food, diesel, trips to Gobabis for shopping, medical needs, and banking.

Our goal for 2023 is to raise $35,000 CAD. This will cover:

1) Operational costs for Mother House, the food programs (MH, kindergarten and

soup kitchen) and the garden – approximately $30,000 CAD

2) Garden expansion – planting a citrus orchard, adding vegetables and fruits,

supplying protective shade netting – costing approximately $5000 CAD.

We are also pleased to announce we are joining CSN in a special international fund-

raising effort to bring power to the Sanctuary complex. The MH was prepared for

electrical hookup in early 2022. At the time, the official authorized to provide power

promised to do so but more than a year later that has not been forthcoming. While no

formal explanation has been given, the provision of power is unlikely at a time when

Namibia, South Africa and their neighbours are experiencing severe drought conditions

and extended power outages. Rationing of electricity is a fact of life in all these

countries.

Given these circumstances, the CSN board has decided to invest in solar power.

Together, we are raising money for the purchase and installation of solar panels. These

will be a reliable source of energy for the MH and Sanctuary land, meeting needs for

heat, light, appliances, computer and phone, as well as running the water pump that

supplies water for the house and garden. The estimate for materials and installation is

$21,000 CAD.

It is a joy to collaborate with the CSN board and the people of Drimiopsis to support

their children to grow into adults capable of enriching the quality of life in their

community. We could not do this without your generous hearts. You help us raise up a

community in ways guided by and contributed to by the people themselves. We thank

you from the bottom of our hearts. We hope you will continue to journey with us on this

great adventure, an adventure that is life-changing for all! Thank you for your attention.

January 2023 News

Together with our deep gratitude for your support in 2022, here are some highlights of the achievements your donations made possible. The most important is the completion and opening of the Mother House, a home for 16 orphaned and vulnerable children of Drimiopsis! 

Mother House

Left, children dancing at a community celebration of the opening of the Mother House.

Lazarus Musambani, Director of the Omaruru Children’s Orphanage and CSN Board Member, selected 16 of the most vulnerable children from a possible 75 in Drimiopsis, to reside at the Mother House until age 18. His expertise with Ministry guidelines speeded up registering the Sanctuary as a Child Care Facility. With her two children, Belinda Tsuses was hired and moved into the house to become the resident Manager.  Lazarus taught Belinda, Chief Ita, and the House Mothers, Viktoria and Katrina, many aspects of their roles. Belinda ensures that Ministry guidelines are followed. As a team under Belinda’s guidance, they provide loving care for the children who are now settled into their new home, enjoying food, shelter, and support in all aspects of life, including school. The youngest children attend Sanveld Kindergarten, while the older ones attend the local public school. 

Four children who didn’t know their birthdates or ages, proudly display their birth certificates!

CSN Manager

Belinda Tsuses has been busy this year supervising routines and programs in the House, supervising CSN’s food and garden projects, and cultivating positive relationships with neighbours and merchants from local communities. She has brought CSN and the Sanctuary to the attention of Namibians by inviting their support via media interviews. Since electricity has yet to be supplied to the Moher House, Belinda uses a donated laptop and her cell phone at the home of Theresa Matengu, the High School teacher who co-founded CSN with Helge Mercker and Chief Ita.    

Soup Kitchen

The Soup Kitchen remains a vital resource for 120 + orphaned and vulnerable children who receive three meals weekly from a dedicated group of volunteers. Left, orphaned and vulnerable children gather for a special Soup Kitchen Christmas meal, including a meat serving. Each child and volunteer received a Christmas gift of food items.

Kindergarten Food Program

CSNS funds the Sanveld Kindergarten food program, providing two meals daily, five days a week, during the school year for the 55 children in attendance.  Left, the children wash their hands before entering their school for a meal.

Sanctuary Garden

Expanding the Sanctuary’s Gardens remains a crucial goal for CSN. CSNS is fundraising to purchase shade netting, a solar panel water pumping system, fruit trees, and fertilizer. Produce from the garden supplements the children’s mealie porridge and lentils diet. Crops of carrots, spinach, and sweet potatoes are grown year-round, while watermelon, mealies, tomatoes, and onions are planted during the summer.

CSNS Board

The CSNS Board welcomes a new board member, Tyler Cresswell. Tyler’s business and marketing knowledge is a valuable resource for our board of retired social workers and teachers.  From left to right, Tyler Cresswell, Yvonne de Troye, Diane Mawson, Judy Dunbar, Betty Owen, and Terry Adler. Absent: Helge Mercker, our agent in Namibia.

A note about fundraising

Left: We thank Yvonne for hosting another successful house concert at her lovely home in Tsawwassen, B.C. A special “thank you” to the staff and students of Canyon Heights Elementary School in North Vancouver, BC, for their continued support of the “Pops for Namibia” program. Proceeds from the sale of popsicles support the food program at Sanveld Kindergarten and the Soup Kitchen.

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