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    Mustadafin Foundation serves poor communities for past 30 years

    The Mustadafin Foundation has been serving poor communities in and around the Western Cape - and lately Eastern Cape - since 1986.
    Mustadafin Foundation serves poor communities for past 30 years

    The foundation focuses mainly on five key areas:

    • Education: Children and adults alike are given the opportunity to better themselves through learning.
    • Poverty eradication: Feeding schemes and winter warmth schemes are combined with skills development programmes to lift the destitute out of poverty.
    • Health: Trained community-based carers help to provide home-based care and lifestyle advice to those with little to no access to public health care.
    • Community development: Youth development is essential for a thriving community. Youth camps and skills development programs empower young adults to grow to their full potential.
    • Disaster relief: Meals and clothing are provided to those who are hardest hit by natural disasters such as floods or fires.

    Mustadafin Foundation feeds up to 15,000 people in need every day and has ensured the successful integration of 150 homeless children into the public school system by 2015. It has also established health programmes, adult literacy programmes, a bursary programme for students in tertiary education and 22 preschools.

    Past achievements

    “Our greatest achievements during 2015 included appointing 25 more employees in Tafelsig in Cape Town (with the help of the Department of Social Development) and signing an agreement to collaborate with the National Association of Child Care Workers on their Isibindi project,” says Ghairunisa Johnstone, founder and director of the Mustadafin Foundation.

    The Isibindi project implements community-based care and protection programmes that help children and youth who have been left desolate by death in the family due to HIV/AIDS.

    Johnstone also received the Community Builder of the Year Award at the Black Business Quarterly (BBQ) Awards in 2015 and says that the Foundation is very pleased to be recognised with such a fitting award. The foundation was also second runner up for the BBQ Innovative Business Award.

    Despite the difficulties, the non-profit continues to actively uplift the community. Recent initiatives included the delivering of cooked food and Christmas parcels to 1,000 people, including 100 seniors, in underprivileged communities; distributing hot meals and blankets to 120 survivors of the Nomzamo fire disaster; giving 1,700 bags away to patients at the Groote Schuur hospital who could not go home over the holidays; and treating children from destitute areas to a day of fun in the park.

    The way forward

    The foundation is looking forward to an even more successful year in 2016 and to operating from a building owned by the organisation by the end of the year. However, it is not merely the number of volunteers or the amount of funds that will create change. “In 2016, we want to see the community being committed to education and its members taking ownership of their lives by beautifying themselves and their environment,” says Johnstone.

    To continue with the good work it does, the foundation relies on funding and donations of food, toys and clothes. It also depends on volunteers to help by contributing their time and skills to uplift the community.

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