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                Thusanang Project
                   
                  
                    
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                              Lesotho Community and Family based  Vulnerable Children’s Care Centre Project | 
                             
                           
                            
                         
                        
                          
                             HELP ! 
                                  THE  AIDS ORPHANS IN AFRICA                              
                        
                           
                          50,000,000  estimated orphans in 
                            Africa by the year 2010  (Unicef) 
                            
                      
                        
                            
                              The onslaught of HIV erodes the traditional care system by  simply overloading its caring capacity by the sheer number of orphaned children  needing support and care.  
                              HIV undermines the caring capacity of both families and  communities by deepening poverty due to loss of labour and the high cost of  medical treatment and funerals’                               | 
                             
                           
                       
                        
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                      Children's Care Center Project 
                        
                      
                        
                          Lesotho is a small independent,  beautiful but poverty stricken mountainous land-locked kingdom in Southern Africa.  It has a population of approximately 2.5  million Africans known as Basotho in plural and as Mosotho in singular.  The official HIV/AIDS infection rate is over  30% however, many believe it in reality to be over 50%. 
                            There are over 200,000 orphans of which  100,000 are estimated to be HIV/AIDS related. 
                            The Kingdom   of Lesotho is made up of 10 districts, each having approximately 250  villages. 
                            The lifestyle is generally rural with  only one large town, Maseru,  the capital, in the country. 
                            Lesotho has experienced drought and famine over the last three years.  | 
                         
                       
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
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                      The overall objective of  this project is to relieve the suffering of orphans and vulnerable children in Lesotho in Africa through the planning, financing, construction, staffing,  maintenance and ongoing operation of Community and family based Vulnerable  Children’s Care Centres.
                      The initial goal is to  create a pilot project at Mount   Moorosi,  a village in the Quthing District of Lesotho with documented significant  high-risk orphan populations. The centre will either be built or existing  buildings extended in low cost traditional Basotho style and will include a  kitchen for feeding vulnerable children and orphans, toilet and bathing  facilities, space for educational, counselling and vocational skill building  programming, as well as a few beds for short-term housing. Agricultural and  other skills will be promoted to encourage self-sustainability and to reduce  food costs to the centre. 
                      
                       
                        Lesotho is a small independent,      beautiful but poverty stricken mountainous land-locked kingdom in Southern Africa.  It has a population of approximately 2.5      million Africans known as Basotho in plural and as Mosotho in      singular.   The official HIV/AIDS      infection rate is over 30% however, many believe it in reality to be over      50%. 
                        There are over 200,000 orphans of      which 100,000 are estimated to be HIV/AIDS related. 
                        The Kingdom of Lesotho is made up of 10 districts, each having approximately      250 villages. 
                        The lifestyle is generally rural      with only one large town, Maseru, the capital, in the country. 
                        Lesotho has experienced drought and famine over the last      three years. 
                       
                           A minimum of  ongoing operational funding will be necessary to sustain each centre beyond the  building/extension and furnishing of the original facilities. The  sustainability of this project is based on the non-denominational management  and staffing of these centres by the Basotho villagers themselves. Volunteers  from the village and existing community resources will be utilized to provide  ongoing programming and support.
                      
                      A core value and activity  of this project will be the counselling, support and placement of vulnerable  children and orphans with extended families.  
                      It is envisaged that this  project will initially be organized and coordinated by the Catholic Church  within the Diocese of Qacha’s Nek, Rotary Lesotho and Rotary International,  Lovelight of Byron Bay of Australia and other  stakeholders. The children’s care centre will be immediately managed by the  non-denominational Thusanang Committees which will include the existing  non-denominational humanitarian Justice and Peace Committees already set up by  the Catholic Church, made up of the villagers themselves and set up within Mount Moorosi. 
                      The basic belief in Divinity itself and the five  human values of Truth, Love, Peace, Goodness and Non-Violence and the giving of  selfless service will form the core functioning of this project. 
                      This project is seen as a  potential blue print for sustainable African community and family-based and  village-run vulnerable children’s care centres required to address the growing  HIV/AIDS pandemic that is sweeping Africa. An evaluation plan will be built into the design of  this project so that we can test the viability of this concept and duplicate it  if successful in other parts of Lesotho and Africa.  We believe  our proposed project represents ‘best practices’ as articulated in many United  Nations documents and also adheres to the philosophy of the Lesotho government on dealing with the orphan  crisis in this country.
                         
                      
                      The project will cater for  all vulnerable children whether HIV/AIDS related or not. 
                      While every effort will be  made, as part of this project, to keep vulnerable children with appropriate  village extended family units, we recognize that such prospects do not exist  for all children who are orphaned. By extension, a further goal of this project  is the potential development of new family units i.e., foster mother (and  father where possible), and groupings of individual children and brothers and  sisters who can provide each other with mutual support. 
                      The cost of this initial 2  year phase of the project is AUD520,000 which will support 350 orphans and  vulnerable children and enable the construction of a simple elegant operational  Child Care Centre at Mount Moorosi (we have assumed support for half of the  estimated 700 orphans and vulnerable children at Mount Moorosi).  This document is being distributed to obtain  this funding to enable this project to continue.  | 
                     
                   
  
				  
                  
                    
                      The Problem 
                          
                      
                        
                          | The  vast beautiful isolation of the highlands which form a large part of Lesotho.  
                        Living in these harsh regions is very  difficult. | 
                         
                       
                        
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                      Lesotho is a land-locked mountain kingdom surrounded by South Africa. The economy is heavily dependent on agriculture and  exporting water and labour to the South African mines. There has been a  significant amount of retrenchment of workers from the mines over the past five  years, leaving many families with little or no income.
                      Many of the  miners also returned to Lesotho with HIV/AIDS and other chronic health  problems. According to the HIV/AIDS surveillance data reported by the Ministry  of Health and Social Welfare (2000), the HIV prevalence rate in the country is  30%. In a joint report issued by UNAIDS/UNICEF/UNAID, ‘Children on the  Brink’ (2002), it was reported that by 2003 there would be an estimated  180,000 orphans in Lesotho, with 100,000 orphaned by AIDS and 49,000 of those  children documented as double orphans (both parents deceased). On a recent  fact-finding mission conducted by Lovelight of Byron Bay and the Justice and  Peace Committee, our team visited three primary schools in the Qachas Nek and  Quthing Districts and discovered that between one third and one half of the  student body (135 students) were orphaned with approximately 100 single orphans  and 25 to 35 double orphans.
                         
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                      The Need 
                          
                        Basotho  village children 
                          
                          
                       
                      
                        
                          Winter in Lesotho is extremely cold.  Many  of the mountains and the approximately 2,500 villages are around 2,500 to 3,000  metres above sea level, some even higher.   Large tracts of Lesotho are covered in snow for many months in Winter, making the life  of the poverty stricken Basotho people very difficult.  | 
                         
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                      Orphans in Lesotho need alternatives to institutional care  where extended families do not exist or cannot afford to care for them any  longer. While the Lesotho village social structure provides  extended family support for many of the orphans, in many villages there remain  dozens of vulnerable children who are homeless, uncared for, sexually abused or  at risk for other forms of exploitation, including prostitution.
                          
                      
                      
                      According to the United  Nations Children’s Fund (Bjorn Ljungqvist, 2003), ‘...throughout sub-Saharan Africa, there  have been traditional systems in place to take care of children who lose their  parents for various reasons. But the onslaught of HIV slowly but surely erodes  this good traditional practice by simply overloading its caring capacity by the  sheer number of orphaned children needing support and care. HIV also undermines  the caring capacity of families and communities by deepening poverty due to  loss of labour and the high cost of medical treatment and funerals’ 
                           
                        Keeping orphans in school  is crucial to their futures. While primary education is basically free in  Lesotho through 7th grade (as of 2005), many orphans are not in  school due to extended family not being interested in educating them or able to  afford other school fees.  According to  UNAID report ‘The Global HIV Epidemic, 2002’, 52% of the children  orphaned by AIDS in Kenya were not in school compared to 2% among non-orphans.  Stephen Lewis, UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa,  stated in his report ‘Africa Recovery (2001)’, ‘There has to be a Herculean effort made for these kids so we  don’t lose them. Otherwise you will have a society where kids haven’t been to  school and therefore can’t fulfil even basic jobs...a society where a large  proportion can have anti-social instincts because their lives have been so  hard. You have a generation of children who will be more vulnerable to  exploitation and to disease because they won’t have the same sense of  self-worth’.  One of the  goals of this project will be to encourage orphans to remain in school and/or  to provide educational opportunities on site including vocational and  agricultural skill-building.  
                       According to several studies, orphans are thought to  be at greater risk for being malnourished and stunted due to their general lack  of access to regular nutrition. Both ‘malnutrition and illness are  associated with children who are alone after the death of their parents’ (pg.  225, ‘Turning A Crisis Into An Opportunity; Strategies For Scaling Up The  National Response to the HIV/AIDS Pandemic-- UNDP). This Thusanang project  seeks to provide at least two solid meals each day for both double and single  orphans in each village.
                         
                                            
                      Winter in Lesotho is extremely cold.       Many of the mountains and the approximately 2,500 villages are      around 2,500 to 3,000 metres above sea level, some even higher.  Large tracts of Lesotho are covered in snow for many months in Winter, making      the life of the poverty stricken Basotho people very difficult. 
                       For AIDS orphans in particular, counselling and  emotional support is essential. ‘These children suffer profoundly as their  parents fall sick or die, with their experience characterized by psychosocial  distress from their parents illness or death, which is worsened by the stigma  and shame associated with HIV/AIDS. The psychosocial impact of caring for ill  and dying parents cannot be overestimated. It can affect schoolwork and the  ability to keep up in class. There is also the obvious hardship in relation to  the inability of the parents to work, resulting in children being forced to  take on frightening adult responsibilities’ (pg. 225, ‘Turning A Crisis Into An  Opportunity; Strategies For Scaling Up The National Response to the HIV/AIDS  Pandemic’ (UNDP) ). The toll on the family structure and the rush of these  children into parental roles complicates their passage to adolescence and  adulthood. 
                         
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                      The Founder 
                       
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                      Solihin Millin is the founder of Lovelight of Byron  Bay Charitable Trust (Australia).  Sol is an Australian citizen who was born in South Africa. 
                        He was  Scholar of the Year in 1960 at Hilton College,  Kwazulu/Natal. He has a 1st class B.Sc Degree in Applied Math and  Physics from Natal   University  in Durban.  He has spent most of his professional career in the Information Technology  field. After raising his three children in Australia, Sol has  decided to focus his energy on humanitarian efforts and selfless service to the  helpless and disadvantaged in Africa,  based on the teachings of Sathya Sai Baba of India. 
                      His websites:  www.lovelight.org.au and www.byronbayattitude.com.   | 
                     
                                       
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