By Dennis Gaboury | Founder, Chair, Board of Trustees
In a country with 94 percent unemployment, every group that works with orphans is dogged by the problem of developing an “exit strategy” for their young charges – and few have succeeded. Zimkids is thus particularly proud that we are not only family, friend and confidante to the young people who have been with us from the beginning and are now finishing high school, but that we have developed programs to train them to open their own businesses and/or in skills that will appeal to the few employers left in the country.
This year alone, a total of eleven people received professional training this year from Zimkids, and we hope that they will follow in the footsteps of Foster and Collen, who received their first training with us in construction and welding and now have entered the workforce installing solar panels and solar hot water heaters for a major company. That’s no small achievement when 40-year-olds with two decades of experience are begging for work! Also, Thamani and Hloniphile have just finished a course that led to their certification as nurses’ aides – and they will begin working at the central hospital in January.
We sent both Ngqabutho and Zibusiso for training in electrical wiring, and Ngqabutho is about to begin an advanced course, as he will be replacing Foster in maintaining our solar array and electrical infrastructure. He also was trained in plumbing under the guidance of certified plumbers. Even our staff is getting in on the act, with Phillip working on a diploma that will give him a license in social work.
Our welding program continues to thrive and 20 new young people are about to start construction training as part of the construction of a new building for our pre-school. The preschool has proven to be one of our most successful programs, and after our first class “graduated,” neighborhood parents were lining up at our gates requesting places for their children. We realized, then, that we could move toward self-sufficiency by becoming a licensed preschool that would charge non-orphans while accommodating orphans for free. We then sent two of our girls for training and certification as early childhood educators. And we will open both as an independent preschool in January 2016 – and as a certified training center for preschool teachers.
The building will be constructed, as have ALL our buildings, by vocational trainees. At the beginning of this year, Foster and Collen led the seniors and elders on the construction of our sewing center, which took only one month to complete. New builders emerged from this project and both girls and boys worked tirelessly to ensure that the sewing center was finished on time even as they gained practical building skills.
A vital part of our vocational training is to teach our older kids to pay it forward by helping other younger children. Several months ago, our staff and a group of our Seniors – our oldest Zimkids – went a step further by establishing an outreach program to orphans in a crude settlement for displaced families called Methodist 7 miles from our center in the bush. Sithabisiwe, Nkosikhona, Ngqabutho and Samantha have given their all in trying to help the kids from Methodist, and the outreach program has strengthened everyone’s abilities in communication, teamwork, and planning. We recently distributed shoes to our outreach kids courtesy of the Buckner Foundation.
I should end with a special New Year Shout-out to all of our amazing donors. We have now received financial assistance from more than 2,000 of you, and without that help, we could never have gotten that far. Consider that the group we think of as our Texas gogos (grandmothers) made over 200 quilts and bought new underwear for our kids, as well as furnishing the sewing center with sewing and overlock machines, along with thread, scissors, fabric and patterns. A group of young people in Plano, Texas made 50 fleece blankets for our preschoolers. The Buckner Foundation gave Zimkids shoes for all our kids. And our wonderfully generous friends from the P&G alumni network have, time and again, provided us with the funds necessary to build the structures we need for our vocational projects.
We end 2014 optimistic that we’re moving in the right direction because every day we see our children growing stronger, in body and in spirit. We at Zimkids wish you the happiest of new years with bottomless gratitude for making ours so bright.
Links:
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.


