Reaching their potential
April 10, 2023
Above: “Developing youth from the ground up”. Lalela’s Leadership Programme students learn valuable life skills.
Every year, Lalela carefully selects a group of learners from Silikamva High School in Imizamo Yethu and Hout Bay High School in Hangberg to participate in our Leadership programme. We’re excited to welcome our new group into this life-changing experiential learning opportunity!
Lalela’s Leadership Programme was launched with the goal of entrenching a strong values-driven mindset in students showing leadership potential. Through intensive life-skills training, it’s our aim to guide these students to become confident, grounded young achievers who can, in turn, become role models and strong leaders in their schools and communities. At Lalela, we like to call them ‘trailblazers of change’.
As with most other under-resourced areas in South Africa, youths from these communities have to deal with some enormous challenges in their day-to-day lives, which can often seem insurmountable. The effects of poverty in both of these areas in Hout Bay are manifest in extraordinarily high rates of violent crime and robbery, many of which are linked to gangsterism. Substance abuse as well as mental health issues such as anxiety and depression is rife among young people in these communities. When faced with the dismal prospect of unemployment (South Africa’s youth unemployment rate is 59.6% – down from 63.9% last year, but against an overall unemployment rate of 32.9%), it’s hardly surprising that many high school-aged students can feel a deep sense of hopelessness.
“Lalela’s Leadership Programme is an apt example of our approach in developing our youth from the ground up,” says Firdous Hendricks, Lalela’s Executive Director. “The Leadership programme is designed to push our youth that much further to make sure they are able to realise their full potential before stepping out into the big world.”
We were delighted to induct our 2023 intake of young leaders this March at a special Human Rights Day event held at Bertha Retreat on Boschendal Estate. “They got introduced to what it takes to be a young Lalela leader,” explains programme leader Rowan Roman.
“Using the event as a skillset baseline and first (self-reflective) exercise, they were tasked with bonding with, managing, and guiding groups of young Lalela learners from our Boschendal programme, none of whom they have met before.”
This interaction was the first activity of their intensive four-day workshop, during which they got to focus on their goals, personal development, and discovery of their current skillsets and ways of thinking.
“We’re excited to see what this year’s cohort will do. They are the definition of small but mighty, in more ways than one!” Rowan adds.
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Your generosity makes it possible for Lalela’s educational arts programmes to create meaningful change that affects thousands of at-risk children in Sub-Saharan Africa.
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