By Jacinta van Luijk | KAP Coordinator & Education Officer
IMPACT SUSTAINED - Seven Months into the Training...
IN CORE TRAININGS
Tom -
Tom (21 years old) joined the ‘Unreached Youths’ training in December 2021. At the time he worked as a chang’aa brewer in a local drinking den. He also became a regular consumer and lived by the day, admitting that for him there was no hope in life.
He shared that when he was 15 years old he had dropped out of school due to separation of and rejection by his parents, when they stopped supporting his education. Initially he looked for casual jobs as a farm hand. However people took advantage of his vulnerability and did not pay him for his hard work, causing him to try his luck in brewing.
Seven months after starting his KAP course, Tom is a different person: The sessions on self-awareness and self-realization made him see that also for him life was worth living.
He approached a neighbor with a motorbike mechanic workshop and asked for an opportunity to work as a volunteer apprentice. His neighbor gave him the chance, and Tom wholeheartedly took it with both hands. He has stopped drinking and is now well underway in the process of acquiring effective mechanical skills. Tom is so grateful and thanks KAP for changing his life.
Fatuma -
When in December 2021 Fatuma (not her real name) participated in KAP’s core training in Kobos she was a depressed and anxious 24-year old youngster. In the group counselling sessions she opened up and told her story:
She was 15 years old when both her parents died. Being an orphan, her relatives kept their distance and she had no shoulder to lean on. Consequently she worked as a house maid in several towns. Soon Fatuma got ‘married’ and at the age of 17 years she gave birth to a baby boy. Unfortunately the marriage was not a happy one, full of daily violent abuse whilst her husband infected her with a sexually transmitted disease (STI). The latter caused the miscarriage of her second pregnancy and increased the beatings. They separated and she got married to a second husband, a motorbike rider.
Sadly, also in this come-we-stay-marriage there was domestic violence, the STI had not yet been treated and two more miscarriages followed. Fatuma was again two months pregnant when she joined KAP’s training. The teachings on STIs were an eye opener for her; she received counselling and was referred by KAP for medical attention at an affordable church facility. Having learned about the importance of communication she shared her new KAP experiences with her husband who also became interested in learning, being counselled and treatment. Thus they became able to discuss matters on sexual health and relationships and take care of the pregnancy till birth. Despite the economic challenges the ‘Unreached Youth Participant’ Fatuma now feels emotionally stable, and is becoming a keen youth resource person (CRPU) in the Kobos community.
ADVANCED TRAININGS: CRPUs PASSING ON THE MESSAGE -
On the 9th August 2022 Kenya is expecting its General Elections. The stakes are high, and political temperatures are rising. 'Trauma Management for Peace' is part of the CRPU's Advanced Training. In the Mitume/Matisi slum areas of Kitale, due to the political violent operations of five youths militias (some as young as 9-14 years) as well as several recent lynchings, there is increased tension. On the 15th June 2022 an action group of 4 Advanced CRPUs organised a Guided Education Session on violence/trauma prevention for 50 (Assistant-) Chiefs, village elders and fellow youths at the Chiefs office in Mitume. Mobilisation of the participants was not easy due to their high expectations of monetary hand-outs during this political season. However the Mitume CRPUs' Guided Education Session became a most encouraging success! A report:
“During the session Betty testified how her son was lured by a youthful Mitume gang into activities of destroying and stealing from neighbours. Other participants shared how they had lost their businesses worth millions of shillings through repeated political violence. A participant called John became very emotional when explaining how his father was beaten to death in front of his family. This led to a very open and frank sharing by all present. This was painful but educative, and all agreed that they would try by all means to abstain from conflict and violence.
Societal injustices and ethnic incitement however were seen as great stumbling blocks. In response the CRPUs explained how the approach of ‘active non-violence (ANV)’ could be used: You ‘fight back’ but without violence. In addition, ANV helps people to see that there is something good in everyone. When participants remarked that it was impossible to break the chain of the gangs’ violence due to their political rewards, Betty disagreed and urged everyone to follow her example by talking openly with their children and ‘plucking them out’ of the gangs thus weakening them. Village elders were touched and resolved to always discuss violence and peace in their daily conversations, and to organize regular peace talks in their villages.
The CRPUs then talked about how instead of providing money, KAP had given them peace of mind and a changed attitude and behaviors, resulting into their voluntary involvement for many years.
A video on Kenya’s post-election crisis was shown. A local political candidate who had requested ‘to greet the participants’ at the end of the session, was lost for words when eventually given the chance.”
ACTIVITIES AND OUTPUTS
For this report’s details see the attachment “July 2022 Financial Report & Narrative Details”
From the 16th March 2022 till the 30th June 2022 there have been CONTINUOUS MOBILIZATION ACTIVITIES by KAP Staffs for CRPU’s follow-up sessions.
KAP VERY MUCH VALUES FOLLOW-UP ACTIVITIES in order to achieve and maintain real impact.
These Follow-Up activities consisted of
(1) FIVE CONTINUOUS EDUCATION WORKSHOPS in six non-residential days for the new CRPUs in the Kobos/Zea area (amongst the huge ADC farms), in Kiboroa (on Mt Elgon), and for the already graduated (‘old’) CRPUs of Nasianda/Teldet (Mt. Elgon) and Bidii (semi-urban near Kitale). A total of 67 Unreached Youths Community Resource Persons (CRP-Us) were trained;
(2) NINE GUIDED EDUCATION SESSIONS, organized and facilitated by CRPUs in Kobos/Zea, Kiboroa, Mitume and Matisi (Kitale slums), Bidii and Sabata (a rural area 20 kms outside of Kitale). A total of 435 community members were reached, mostly fellow youths but also elders, chiefs, parents and teachers. Topics varied from HIV/AIDS and STIs to substance abuse and addiction and prevention of violence and trauma in the ongoing election period. The sessions were held in a variety of local Churches, schools, a Chief’s office and a CRPU’s home.
(3) HOUSEHOLD (FRIENDS) EDUCATION VISITS BY CRPUs – During the reporting period there were 47 of such visits during which 37 friends of CRPUs-in-training were (repeatedly) engaged. This happened in a series of three visits, which are still ongoing. The beneficiaries learn about all sorts of youths issues, those as mentioned above, but also self-esteem and other concerns in the lives of the participating youths. As the friends are engaged in their own homes and in small numbers beneficiaries have the space to open up and share their lives’ experiences.
(4) From amongst the above beneficiaries 25 youths received PROFESSIONAL COUNSELLING in once-off or multiple sessions by KAP’s qualified staffs.
Altogether, from 16.March through the 30.June 2022 minimal 539 PEOPLE, MOSTLY VULNERABLE YOUTHS, WERE REACHED
WITH OUR HEARTFELT THANKS TO ALL WELLWISHERS AND DONORS WHO HAVE MADE THESE REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENTS POSSIBLE!
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