Mama Themba provides hope to vulnerable new Mothers in the Western Cape of South Africa by offering them valuable antenatal and breastfeeding education.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Meet Zoleka, Breastfeeding Counselor

I was recently able to spend some time with Zoleka Malamba, a breastfeeding counselor and advocate. I was struck by her personal story and how her history has led her to where she is today, making a difference in the lives of other women in similar situations.

Zoleka teaching on the importance of breastfeeding
at a support group

Today, Zoleka is 34 years old and has three kids.  She is married and lives with her husband, George, whom she met 1998.

Zoleka met Frances Fuchs, the manager of Bosom Buddies, while she was working for another NGO (non-governmental organisation), Mothers To Mothers, that counsels women who are HIV+.  She is happy today that she spoke with Frances when her contract with Mothers to Mothers was coming to an end.  She accepted the offer to work for Bosom Buddies in April 2012.

This is just a bit of Zoleka’s story.


Please tell me about yourself.
I grew up living with my mother, grandmother and uncle as social outcasts.  My mother had me when I was 15 years old and then my father left her and went on with his life.  My mother was forced to drop out of school to raise me and became a domestic worker [cleaning houses].  My grandmother also was a domestic worker.  My uncle used to sell newspapers 
at robots [traffic lights].

When I was thirteen or fourteen and in Standard 5 [grade 5], I had to drop school to look after my mother after she’d had a stroke.  She passed away that year and I tried to get back into school in Standard 6.  The next year, my grandmother had a heart attack and passed away, too.  We’d been living in a one-room shack.

I dropped out of school at Grade 10 because I had no support system and then got a job at a supermarket where was paid a total of R98 [around $10] for working a day and a half.  After a while, I got more hours and was able to work for three days for R198 [around $20].  I worked there for five years and it was while I was working at this supermarket that I met my husband, George.

In 2010, I heard that Mothers To Mothers was hiring.  They required a Grade 10 education as well as fluency in English, Afrikaans, and Xhosa.  Since I could speak all languages, I applied and went for an interview.  After two days, I was told I qualified for the job, over other applicants who had finished Grade 12 and beyond!  I still don’t know why they picked me, but thank God for it.


Expectant mother reading our pamphlet
How did you get to know Frances at Bosom Buddies?
When I first met Frances Fuchs, I was helping a woman from the Eastern Cape who had been raped by a policeman and as a result became pregnant, as well as HIV+.  I was heartbroken by her story and asked Frances to help her.  Frances agreed and our friendship began then, while I was still at Mothers To Mothers.

Many mothers that give birth in government hospitals do not have clothes for the babies and when they leave the hospital, must carry the baby home inside their own clothes.  Frances would bring bags of supplies for these mothers in Macassar where I worked with Mothers To Mothers.  We also started a breastfeeding support group together at that hospital a short while later and in 2012, Frances offered me a job at Bosom Buddies.


Was there something like Bosom Buddies for you when you had your first baby?
There was nothing!  I tell the ladies I work with now, “You are so fortunate!  In my time, there was no one to tell us about breast-feeding, how to have a healthy pregnancy, safe sex, and all those things.”  There was only a sister [nurse] to tell us whether or not we were pregnant.  We didn’t even feel like we could ask how our baby was doing because no one had told us that we could ask those questions.  When I was pregnant with my first daughter in 2001, the woman who gave the ultrasound didn’t even ask me if I wanted to know if it was a boy or a girl.  The doctors and nurses acted as if it was not our business to ask questions, and I did not have the courage to ask.

At Bosom Buddies, I can tell the women that it is their right and responsibility to ask questions and to learn.  During labor, it is okay to ask the nurse how many centimeters you are dilated so you can prepare better for the birth.  Sometimes the nurses can be intimidating, but you can still ask.  We want to empower them to press for the information they need.


Would you have made any changes to how you raised your children if you’d known then what you know now?
Yes, I would breastfeed!  With my firstborn, I didn’t want to eat and was very stressed because I didn’t have the support of my mother and father.  I didn’t know how to care for my child.  I didn’t breastfeed because I didn’t know how to do it and formula-fed her instead.  I started to mix feed and feed her porridge at two weeks old.  Because of malnutrition, she didn’t gain weight and at six months old she was still wearing newborn clothes.



If money weren’t an issue, what would you do with your life?
I would educate people more and more and more.  I want to teach them about the importance of breastfeeding.  I want to teach them about the dangers of HIV and how to avoid it and care for it.  It’s a very big problem here and even though people don’t want to talk about it, it is very real.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Newsletter: Sophie's story



It has been a year since we met Sophie at our breastfeeding support group in Macassar. She was referred to our group whilst pregnant with her third child. The antenatal clinic sister thought that Sophie could benefit from joining our group.

Sophie is young, under 25 years, and not a small girl. She has a few tattoos, she is confident and outspoken and often had the group in stitches. What we loved about Sophie was that she was extremely forthcoming with her story and her experiences and not shy to tell us about mistakes she has made and how she has learnt from them.

She left her parent’s home at 17 when she fell in love with the man who also gave her the first taste of Tik. She soon became addicted to the drug and reverted to crime to pay for her habit. When Sophie went to jail she was only 19 years old. After her release at 22, she was unsure of what to do, where to go. Totally alone in the world, she was vulnerable to anyone who would offer her a roof over her head and some kindness and found that in a man she thought will look after her and help her get on her feet.  Sophie quickly relapsed back into the drug scene and fell pregnant with her first child soon after. When this baby was born disabled, it was devastating for Sophie. The child was taken from her by his paternal grandparents, who wouldn’t allow her to see him or ever get any news of her baby. The same happened with her second baby and it was after having her second child taken from her that Sophie decided she needs to change her life completely.

We meet Sophie at this point. She is clean, off the drugs, pregnant with her third child (from the same father) and has vowed that this time things will be different. This baby will not be taken from her. She shared with us the physical, emotional and financial abuse she has suffered at the hands of her boyfriend and his parents. How she longs to see her children who are living with their grandparents, but they refuse her access. She dreams of a future with this child, away from the violence and ugliness that she has grown accustomed to, yet knows that it is not normal or natural in any way. We saw Sophie over a few months as she attended our groups weekly and formed beautiful friendships with us as well as the other women there. We know that Sophie gave birth to a healthy baby girl and that she found a place to stay and part time work. She also told us that her boyfriend doesn’t know where she is. Then suddenly she stopped coming. We were concerned, but hoped that it meant that she had full time work and didn’t have the time to come to our weekly meetings.
The last time one of the BB counsellors saw Sophie was by chance, at Helderberg Hospital. Sophie had a cracked lip and a black eye, but she was devastated, could hardly communicate her distressed story of how her boyfriend found her, and attacked her and their baby. He grabbed the baby from Sophie’s arms and threw her up in the air and let her drop to the ground. Sophie grabbed the baby and ran away, without shoes on her feet, to the clinic. Miraculously baby survived. We haven’t seen or heard from Sophie since and don’t know where she is or how she is. I fear for her life and that of her daughter’s.

What disturbs me about stories such as Sophie’s is the sense of hopelessness that threads through her life and now her daughter’s. Doing what we do, we meet hundreds of women every month, each with a story, beautiful and devastating. Working or volunteering for Thembalitsha, in particular Bosom Buddies, opens our eyes, minds and hearts to these women. We listen, comfort and encourage. We empower and educate. But we struggle against patriarchy and oppression, against abuse and victimisation, against poverty, drug abuse and illness. Often it feels like a losing battle, and we are plagued by the what-if’s and question what we could have done differently. The reality is that we simply do what we can and trust God for the rest. Thembalitsha = New Hope. Every day I pray for Sophie and the hundreds and thousands of women like her that I have met. I hope that we brought at least that little bit of hope, and our success stories, those that make our hearts leap with excitement and our stomachs turn with pride, those stories deserve to be told, but Sophie’s story is more important. She is the one that fell through the cracks, and there are many more like her.

During 2013 we met near 8000 women through our breastfeeding support. I am so proud of my breastfeeding peer counsellors, Liezl and Zoleka, for saving lives and impacting infant mortality. I am thankful for my volunteers who have delivered 5000 Bosom Buddies Bags this year. Our reach is huge. Our love is bigger. Our hearts for mothers are infinite.
Wishing all our readers and supporters a beautiful festive season. Thank you for your continued prayer and support.

Frances

The baby whisperer. Doula Fran



Friday, October 25, 2013

October news: BB support groups

                     The 'Funky Females' Bosom Buddies support group from School of Hope with                                             Frances and our American friend, Shanon.

The support group format has proven very successful for Bosom Buddies. It offers counselling and support, but more than that, companionship and rapport between people in similar circumstances or recovering from similar problems. It is disappointing that our groups aren’t always as well supported as we would like. People don’t recognise the benefits of this format and often might consider it too much effort to join our groups. However, support groups fall in line perfectly with the spirit of Ubuntu and community support and enhancement.
Our most successful support group is at the School of Hope, where I meet with the ‘Funky Females’ on Friday mornings. This is a group of young women who have had children or are pregnant while attending school. I have built a strong relationship with these girls and love them. Our group is honest and the only rule we have is that everything we talk about is confidential. The beautiful result is to witness the friendships that has been formed between the girls. They are there for each other and support one another even when I am not there. They trust each other, cry together, laugh together and share this difficult journey of motherhood, even more complicated since they are single and school-going.

Thank you School of Hope, what a privilege to share our resources, to work together and to give hope.


Oversees support for Bosom Buddies
We are blessed to have supporters from all over the world. Lately we have had more donations from the UK than locally – can you believe that?
Our donations come by mail, or sent in the luggage of travellers. The power of the social media has shrunk the world so hugely that we have friends reading our stories and being touched by our moms, from all over the world. We have also hosted many international visitors at Thembalitsha, who then go home and collect and fundraise for us. At this time I would like to dedicate our blog to these people and thank you so very much for your effort and expense.
Carry On 4 Babies, such an awesome initiative, sending baby stuff with travellers to SA from the UK.
Old dear friend Zoe Lee.
The Simmons’ who bring a huge case every 6 months – and thanks to their friends and family who collect year-round.
Aunt Jan sends a package every second week! Somewhere in London are grannies knitting beautiful caps and booties and I know that this is so enormously special to the mother who is nursing her little premature baby here at our hospital. To be so thought of and loved by a stranger from afar is a hugely humbling and privileged feeling.

                                          Roadside pick-up of a suitcase all the way from the UK!

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

September news: Shamiela's story




Shamiela* is a young woman of 19, mother of 3 children aged 4 years, 2 years and 8 months. She lives with her parents and her sister and next door to her best friend, who also has a baby.
In a society where teenage pregnancies are commonplace and accepted, we find that more and more girls (and of course the men involved) are careless in their sexual practices. It is not a lack of knowledge or a lack of sex education, it is not even a lack of understanding of the consequences of falling pregnant. It is also not necessarily what a lot of people believe, which is that she has babies in order to benefit from the child support grant of R250 per child per month. We all know that this is not nearly enough to support a child. Most women we meet, no matter their age, are unmarried. According to our statistics, less than 25% of the women who attend our support groups are married. This implies that it is also only about 25% of mothers who are supported by the fathers of the children.

So why are incidences of teenage pregnancy so prevalent? Statistics show that a teenage girl who has a baby before her 20th birthday will be pregnant again within two years. Sadly, even with our intervention and influence, we find this to be true as well. I think Shamiela’s story answers this question for us.

Shamiela’s* father drinks and uses drugs, her mother as well. They work on and off, there usually is not much money. Violence is an everyday thing, which is not extraordinary in this community. At 14 years old Shamiela meets a boy. They are in love as only 14 year olds can be - passionately, completely and overpoweringly. This boy loves Shamiela, she feels more than anyone has ever loved her before. This might even be true. Shamiela says it is her and him against the world, but inevitably they are also lured into the world of drugs, in particular the popular and deadly addictive ‘tik’. Within a few months Shamiela finds that she is pregnant. Her parents are angry, but as this is a commonplace occurrence, accept it. Shamiela dotes on her first baby, but feels her boyfriend is slipping away in the mundane and stressful early months of having a baby. After a year and finding out that her boyfriend has been cheating on her, Shamiela decides that the only way to hold onto this love, would be to have another child and so she does. During her second pregnancy the boy breaks up with her anyway and so she and her parents are stuck with 2 children to support and raise. Where does Shamiela find acceptance and esteem? In the arms of another man, of course. This time the man is older with a stable job and promises to support her and her children. These are empty promises, undoubtedly and soon Shamiela finds herself where she is now: single mother of three children under 5 years old and no means to support them, including having given up her schooling at the age of 16.

Shamiela’s story is not uncommon. She is one of many teenage mothers we come across. Our work starts at the clinics where we meet the mothers as they come for antenatal care or breastfeeding advice, but soon we become shoulders to cry on and arms to lean on, often just an ear to listen. You see, Shamiela has never really felt heard. In her despondency we are able to offer friendship, counselling and often practical advice. It is hard and often frustrating. It is by the grace of God and the determination that we start each day believing firmly that this day we will make a difference, we will touch someone, change her life for the better. This is why we do what we do. This is what it’s all about.
*Name has been changed.


Wednesday, August 14, 2013

August news

August is a big month for Bosom Buddies. Women’s month means the focus nationwide is on the health and well-being is on that of the woman, which is why it is in the week coming up to Women’s Day, we celebrate breastfeeding week.   
In South Africa our child mortality rates are alarmingly high and maternal mortality rates are rising.   A large percentage of these deaths are preventable. We believe that through education, support and constant guidance, we can make a real difference, which is why we offer breastfeeding education and support groups at our local clinics daily.

In the partnership between public healthcare and BB, we form a holistic care for our mothers. We offer more than antenatal and baby care; it is about life and lifestyle, finding the voice in the mother. I encourage our women to know their rights, to demand quality service and to ask questions.
Our ultimate aim is to significantly reduce stillbirths and infant deaths and to elevate maternal well-being in our area.
Our focus this past breastfeeding week was on two of our new clinics, Kleinvlei and Grabouw Day Hospital. We have had a presence in these two facilities since May and during breastfeeding week we decided to spoil our moms with special treats and gifts. In spite of chilly winds in Grabouw, loads of women attended. It is a tremendous privilege and often very rewarding to meet and educate these mothers. Zoleka put it perfectly when she said that that’s how we roll – every woman leaves rich in knowledge, with a smile on her face!

This Women’s Day I would like to remind our readers again of the women we at Thembalitsha meet on a daily basis:

·         The HIV positive mother whose biggest fear is transmitting the disease to her child.
·         The 15-year-old mother who is still a child herself.
·         The young woman in love who thinks he might love her back if she does not insist on using a condom.
·         The Choices mother who feels she has no choice but to give this baby to someone else.
·         The mother who goes to hospital with such joyous anticipation but goes home with empty arms because her baby was born sleeping.
·         The mother who is having her 6th child because nobody has ever spoken to her about sterilisation or birth control.
·         The abused woman who fears her own home and what might happen every night.
·         The privileged mother who has 3 of her own children, but still feels that she has the capacity, strength and love to foster or adopt another.
·         Even the woman who lives on the street and who has given up trying to quit a long time ago and gives birth to a baby with foetal alcohol syndrome.

·         And also to the desperate, the depressed, the isolated mother who feels she has no other choice but to abandon her baby.

Mamas having tea in the postnatal room, Grabouw Day Hospital.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

July News



“Our human compassion binds us the one to the other – not in pity or patronisingly, but as human beings who have learnt how to turn our common suffering into hope for the future.” Nelson Mandela

Upon celebrating Mandela day on 18 July, I was yet again encouraged and thrilled to see the whole country united in charitable generosity and kindness. Obviously as an NGO we are overrun by requests for people wanting to join us in doing something. Of course we love showing guests around, for me that is one of the favourite perks of my job. I enjoy taking guests with me to the hospital, showing them around the maternity ward and allowing them to meet the new moms, give them a Bosom Buddies bag and they might even get the opportunity to dress or cuddle a newborn. It is, as with most things, a double-edged sword, though. The mothers having just given birth are in the euphoric, high-adrenalin and endorphin hormonal stage and need quiet time to bond with their babies and initiate breastfeeding. They don’t feel pretty, they are (often) in pain, perhaps even overwhelmed. I know that most of them are thrilled to have a guest, someone who congratulates them with the birth of their baby, but I feel loathe to have them pose for pictures, for them to feel in any way patronized or being ogled at by outsiders. I am therefore always aware that we need to be sensitive and look for what we have in common, rather than what makes us different, divides us.

Another event that is upon us is Women’s day, celebrated on 9 August. Always at this time, I contemplate what it means to be a woman in SA today. I wonder why we don’t have more strong African female leaders.

Girls and young women aren't encouraged to follow politics as a career. Traditional roles will take a long time to break down. In SA, too many young women fall pregnant out of wedlock. What happens mostly is that they give up school or their studies and fall in the cycle of poverty-stricken, undereducated mothers. Daughters are stuck in this cycle and follow by example. We have many strong women in our government and modern political parties with female leaders, but whether they will get the traditional African male vote remains to be seen. I doubt it, the average African woman is not even 'allowed' to wear jeans or trousers, and I doubt they will get the respect and dignity they deserve very soon.

On 9 August 1956, 20 000 women converged on the Union Buildings in opposition to the Group Areas Act and the pass laws that was extended to women. It was during that march that the protest song Wathint’ abafazi wathint’imbokodo (You Strike a Woman/You Strike a Rock) was first popularised. While we enjoy paper rights and can, if we have the means, access the law to force equality, on this August 9, 2013, we should not celebrate. If the women we meet on a daily basis are anything to go by, we as women in SA are mostly afraid and disempowered.

Monday, May 20, 2013

May News

Some of the MFM team - finished!!!

Miles for Moms 2013 was yet another colossal challenge, with 11 of us taking on the Jonkershoek Mountain Challenge on 5 May. I am happy to say that we all survived and did extremely well. We have an amazingly fit and fearless team of runners of who I am very proud. Anthony, James and Charles undertook the extreme 35km distance. Brave men, all three of them! Emily, Willemien, André-Hugo, Jan, Ben and myself braved the 21km (very, very far for a trailrun) and speedsters Monique and Hanel sprinted the 10km.

Why did we do this? We are running to raise awareness for our project, the plights of mothers in our area and to raise some funds. Thank you for your help in spreading our message – that every new life is a celebration, that all mothers need support and compassion, that we are eliminating infant mortality and morbidity in our area through empowerment and education of mothers.

On Sunday 12 May we celebrated Mother’s day. It is on these days that I would like to encourage our supporters to particularly keep disadvantaged mothers in mind and in prayer. Too many of the women we meet are never celebrated, never acknowledged for their roles and tireless work in raising their children, often alone with little or no support from husbands or partners.

In South Africa, it is with more than poverty we struggle with. We are continuously battling legacies from a past that we can’t seem to shake off. Our constitution is of the best in the world, yet our legal and judicial system is sluggish and practically often works against women. Marriage seems to be a custom that is out-dated and not practiced too often, even in relatively conservative cultures in South Africa. Mothers are getting younger, with teenage pregnancies on the increase in the Western Cape, while infant and maternal deaths are on the rise. The gap between rich and poor seems to be on the rise – and at the bottom of the barrel is the woman, and consequently her children. She is poverty-stricken, exhausted and often so intent on survival that she forgets to look beyond her day-to-day existence to the future of her children. I see too many children who don’t attend school, even if schooling might be readily available and affordable. When asked why, the answer is often that the child does not want to go to school. With a mother too tired of fighting for basic rights such as sanitation and water, maintenance payments by an absent father, and a violent society, she does not feel up to the struggle of forcing the child to go to school.

Bosom Buddies is a feminist organisation. We aim to define and determine social justice for women, in particular for mothers. We educate, empower and encourage mothers. We are activists for the rights of mothers. We meet pregnant and breastfeeding mothers and communicate, listen and teach. We dream of one day shrugging off the remnants of inequality and disparity when it comes to daily living, access and traditional roles.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

April News


Education, Education, Education!

We are so proud of our expansion into the education field of preventative healthcare. This is what we are passionate about and in our purpose to actively and positively impact infant mortality and morbidity rates we are working without ceasing.

We are pleased to now officially partner with the City of Cape Town as well as the Department of Health in the campaign of breastfeeding education and support. As of this month, we are happy to announce the employment of another amazing and experienced breastfeeding counsellor, Liezl Bantham. For the past 8 years she has worked as a peer counsellor at the Macassar Day Hospital and she will now be a part of the Bosom Buddies team, educating at clinics in Eersteriver, Grabouw, Strand and Gordons Bay. For our next newsletter, we promise an introductory interview with Liezl.

I had the privilege to be invited to lecture at the Khayelitsha District Hospital’s quarterly 20-hour training in breastfeeding management. The training of nursing staff and peer counsellors falls under our mission and it is in recognition of the work we are doing and the expertise and respect we have garnered in our field that we are invited to participate in the training of staff.

My colleague from the Village of Hope, Tim, introduced me to a woman who looks after 10 children, all under 2 years old, in her shack in Grabouw’s Iraq settlement. Visiting her home was another sobering reminder of the need in our urban townships. All these children are cared for without easy access to running water or electricity. The shack is bare of any furnishings and the children had no toys or any other form of stimulation. I realise of course that our preoccupation with breastfeeding and education has limits, especially for those mothers who have to go to work and need to leave their babies in the care of a woman without a fridge or means for heating expressed breast milk. It is equally as difficult for her to properly sterilise and mix formula bottles. It is near impossible for the mother to express and keep breast milk without a fridge, especially during the summer months. This dilemma disconcerts and disturbs me, since no obvious solution can be found. This is just another reminder of how desperation forces our mothers to make very difficult decisions.

Please support our Miles for Moms team. We are running up a mountain for our cause on 5 May! Next month we will have results and pictures.

ALSO! - If you've not checked out our new film 'Ovayo's Story of Hope' please do and let us know what you think!

Friday, March 15, 2013

March News


There has been a lot of debate on our social platforms surrounding breastfeeding vs bottle feeding. One might wonder why we would invest so much in educating mothers on this issue. People are often surprised when I mention the topic. Or activists for breastfeeding are branded as ‘hippies and Nazis’. Yes, I have been called both. Let me explain my views as endorsed by our own Department of Health, by the World Health Organisation and UNICEF.

A middle class mother in urban areas in Europe has the benefits of antenatal education, of clean running water, of sterilising equipment, enough money to buy formula milk, help and resources nearby. She would be (one would hope) properly educated around the benefits of breastfeeding, on how to deal with difficulties and she would be literate in order to read and understand mixing instructions on the formula tin.

It is true that some women are unable to breastfeed for some specific medical reason; it
is also true that women don’t have the support to be successful at breastfeeding. Often problems with lack of supply are mentioned. Lack of supply can be directly linked to lack of information Bottles and pacifiers (of any kind) detrimentally affect breast milk supply.

In a new report by Save the Children, it is estimated that 830,000 babies could be saved every year if they were breastfed in the first hour of life. The colostrum, or first milk, provides potent antibodies that protects against disease. Breastfeeding in that golden hour after the baby’s birth typically leads to exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months.

So why isn't this happening? Save the Children identifies four major barriers to breastfeeding:

1) Community and cultural pressures
2) The health worker shortage
3) Lack of maternity legislation
4) Inappropriate marketing of breast-milk substitutes

In the developing world (this includes South Africa); the price paid is particularly high. A baby dies every 30 seconds for lack of protection breastfeeding provides against malnutrition and deadly disease.

What does all this have to do with Bosom Buddies? Our work is done in urban Cape Town, but we are definitely not exempt from these statistics and struggles. Anywhere in South Africa, our townships are places of poverty, struggle and hardship, particularly for the women and mothers. I always emphasise to the mothers in our support groups that the most significant hurt you can hurt a mother, is the pain of losing a child. In spite of access to medical care, all 4 of the above barriers still affect our mothers. Bosom Buddies is employing another breastfeeding expert from April, to help us to reach more women and to positively impact the infant mortality and morbidity rates in our area.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

February News

Miles for Moms Team 2012

The Miles for Moms team is back! Our challenge this year is the Jonkershoek Mountain Challenge on 5 May. Our team will be running up the treacherous and challenging Stellenbosch mountains in an effort to raise awareness and funds for Bosom Buddies. And as a special treat we have a celeb joining us! Watch this space…

This month we are growing our support groups
and antenatal efforts. We will be joining our colleagues and friends in Grabouw in the upliftment of that area, in particularly focusing on the mothers we love so much. We will have a daily presence in the MOU of the day hospital, where our employee will do what we do best – educate, support, inspire and offer hope. We are excited for this new venture and so grateful for our growth and progress.
We are also happy to be advancing into Strand and Gordons Bay, where will support the clinics at Fagan street, as well as Gordons Bay and Ikwezi.

Along with the rest of South Africa, I am outraged by the death and murder of Anene Booysen and I am pleased that it is receiving this much attention in the press, with vigils and marches and front page stories. What saddens and frustrates me is why it has taken so long to be outraged by what happens on a DAILY basis in our townships and rural areas. It is no exaggeration to say that this is a daily occurrence
to many many girls and women in our country. I am glad we are finally giving the issue some attention, but frustrated for the many years wasted. I know many teenage girls who have been brutally raped, sodomised and abused and have to see their rapists regularly out of fear to report the cases or because of our often futile social and justice system. Added in the mix are leaders that, if not condone, then silently commend such behaviour. I do hope that Anene’s death will mean swifter and more effective justice, compassion and tolerance for our women.

Some statistics: During 2011/2012 over 64 000 sexual offenses were reported in RSA. These are the reported cases. A girl like Anene had to die a violent death in order for people to take notice. Like I say, frustrating.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

January News

The Kangaroo Room at Christmas

Christmas-time is always bittersweet for us at Bosom Buddies. We receive a pile of gorgeous gifts from the amazing Operation Shoebox and it is a real treat to deliver these on Christmas morning as well as on New Year’s Day. I also love the optimism and excitement that surround the start of a new year; people just tend to be a little bit more hopeful for the future, specifically the year ahead. That, coupled with the miracle we witness daily, BIRTH, makes for a season of new beginnings, a happy summertime enthusiasm that we encounter in the passages of the maternity and labour ward at the hospital. It is plainly happy.

The bitter part is for the mothers who have to spend this time with their sick or premature babies at the hospital. It is especially hard for anyone to worry about a sick baby when everyone else is happy, and overindulging in festivities. The kangaroo room was full to bursting at Christmas time. I loved to see how these mothers made the best of being where they are, supporting and loving each other. I loved how happy they were to get their presents, spoiling their tiny little babies.

Unfortunately we continue to have babies born sleeping, even at these times, and sadly encountered one on Christmas day as well as 31 December. It is small solace to be able to provide a shoulder to cry on and a prayer for the mother at this time, but it is a shoulder she would not have had, had we not been there, a prayer nobody would have prayed was it not for Bosom Buddies. We have exciting plans for 2013 in offering counseling for these mothers from our premises. Please continue to pray for this project, Babies Born Sleeping has always been close to our hearts.

We are also extending our breastfeeding support group services and will be offering a group from Ikwezi shortly. Breastfeeding education is particularly important at this time, as it is gastro season. I am aware of 4 babies dying in our area from complications of diarrhea. The frustration is that these are preventable with the right education and support.

Thanks again to Operation Shoebox for the gorgeous gifts. We love Shoeboxers!

Finally, we are excited to receive 50 cases of sanitary towels for Kimberly Clark this week! It is wonderful when our biggest problem is where to store our stuff! The year is off to a great start.