The Best View in all of Stellenbosch

The Best View in all of Stellenbosch
Stellenbosch: the city and the mountains as seen from Kayamandi township

Saturday, June 8, 2013

48. Sala Kakuhle, Kayamandi

30 May Thursday was my last day volunteering at a creche in Kayamandi. We arrived there very early in the morning and the four of us were split up to go to three different creches on 7th Avenue in Kayamandi which was a pretty long walk away from the Prochorus center. I volunteered to go to a creche by myself, but I had no idea what I was getting myself into for the day.


It was quite a shocking experience for me. I do not know if this crèche mother regularly attends Denise’s training sessions, but if she does, there was no manifestation of it in her crèche today. I try to remind myself that I see only a few hours, one day of activity in the crèches and that perhaps the crèche mothers do not operate normally because I am there. But this time, it was as if the crèche was a child warehouse. Denise spoke about these types of crèches and the width of the spectrum among her own crèches in Kayamandi in this regard. 

When I arrived, there were about twenty-five children just standing in a very small dark shack and an older woman watching television sitting in the corner feeding a baby on her lap while a few other infants slept in the corner. She was wearing her nightgown and robe and the room was in chaos. A few more children trickled in over the course of the morning, until there were about thirty-three children in the room. Eventually, the crèche mother got dressed and continued feeding the babies and changing their diapers. Her only interactions with the older children were translating to me that some of them needed to go outside to pee in the bucket and handing them their snacks from their backpacks. There was no lesson. There was no singing or alphabet or counting or anything like that. I did my best to engage them and count with them and do the alphabet and identify colors and sing and play games. But they spoke no English – not a work – so it was extremely challenging for me. I struggled with frustration from time to time, and noticed that I kept checking my watch far more frequently than is usual. So I told myself that this was not fair to the children I was working with. 

             So as I sat there, opening little yogurt cups and chip bags for the kids, as they grabbed my hair with their hands that had not been washed (this was the first crèche I was at that did no hand-washing before or after potty breaks and eating times), I thought back to the calm beautiful relaxing Garden Route excursion. Woahhhh I missed that. 

And then of course I thought about worldviews. I thought about how my worldview, which I have been analyzing a lot lately, influenced by my background and education, could help me out in this situation. I know I've talked about this before, but I am going to say it again, because it's helpful for me to write about it. I am a firm believer in the value of the idea of Christian solidarity, something that is pertinent to my own worldview. I have recognized the usefulness of this ideal a few times before and so this day, I thought about it in terms of worldview and also development. The way I see solidarity is as truly being with the people you are with at the moment; it is about living in the moment but with care for the future. I felt so helpless and so hopeless in the crèche this morning. So I challenged myself to see the world from the eyes of these kids for a second. They are not the least it horrified by the conditions they are in. The fact that their teacher was running around in her nightgown and robe all morning is not strange to them. The smell in the room, the condition of their clothes, the quality of their food does not make them feel sorry for themselves or feel poor. They are at crèche. They are there to be safe, to learn, to have fun, to stay out of the streets, because their parents made them – whatever their reasons they were there and so was I. 

I felt somewhat disparaging of the fact that I would only be in these kids lives for a few hours. What difference could I make? Was this sustainable? Could I really contribute? If done well, yes, yes I could. I could live in the moment with these kids. I could teach them the “If you’re happy and you know it…” song that I have loved since I was their age. They might forget it tomorrow. Or they might remember it forever as the song the crazy white girl from America taught them. Or they just remember it and not know how or why they had learned it. But at least for the time I was with them, those kids would know they were special and loved and would learn a song about feeling happy. After a lot of hand gestures and exaggerated facial expressions on my part, we taught each other the English and isiXhosa words for happy, sad, cry, smile, clap, etc. We stood in a circle holding hands, which took about fifteen minutes of motioning and negotiations, and I made each child perform, dance, or tell us something (I had no idea what they were saying but the other kids did) – for the rest of us. I had been inspired by the teachers from playgroup; individual attention is so valuable in early childhood development.

At the end of the day, when it was time for me to leave, I couldn't wait to get out of there fast enough, but I also felt like I couldn't leave. I didn't want to leave this children, not ever. I wanted to run home and shower. I was so conflicted. But obviously, I had to go and when I walked back to Prochorus and got my backpack and left, I felt a sad and sick feeling to be leaving Kayamandi to never work there again. This community, Prochorus, working in a township, playing with the smallest and most vulnerable members of this community every week for a day, that was a life changing experience for me. It's something I'll never get to experience again. I'm so grateful I had the experience, but at the time I just had so many conflicting emotions whizzing through my brain.

When I got back to my dorm, I wrote my reflection journal for Development class on the day, and poured my heart into it. And then I wrote another paper for my Public Health class on my personal worldview. It was a really interesting assignment, and I actually had a lot to say. Then, as I stood in the shower washing my hair, I closed my eyes and all I could see was the images of the children from the morning. Rushing at me, all trying to touch me, all trying to get close to me, all trying to touch my hair and my skin and my face, all trying to give me the local "thumbs up" sign (I still need to figure out what that means), all saying words in isiXhosa, all asking for love and attention with their eyes. It was like an awake nightmare and escalated into a borderline panic attack. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't open my eyes. I couldn't close them. I almost broke down into tears, but I held them back. Why? I have no idea. I think I do not want to admit the horror of what I saw. I don't want to admit that that's ok and that it happens and that life goes on for people in this way. That this is a reality of life and that people are not horrified by this. 

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