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by Bruce O. Boston
Summer camp is an annual ritual of delight for millions of American youth.
But for children in South Africa, the physical challenges, social skill-building,
the friend-making, and the just plain fun of camp have been basically
absent — until now.
That delight was experienced by ninety-seven South African boys, ages
eight to fifteen, who attended Camp Sizanani (Zulu for "helping each
other") from January 4-13, 2004, in the Magliesberg Mountains, about
forty miles from Johannesburg and Soweto. They inaugurated the first-ever
camp for HIV/AIDS-affected youth in Africa. Led by an international cadre
of twenty-two counselors drawn from the United States (several of them
former Peace Corps volunteers) and eight South Africans (mostly college
students from Soweto University), the youth spent a week doing the things
that campers do — nature hikes, theater games, scavenger hunts,
arts and crafts, playing soccer, learning to swim, cleaning their residences,
and developing "daily life skills" — the abilities to
communicate, cooperate, and get along with others they will need to prepare
for life in a country with a raging public health problem.
A Three-Way Partnership
Camp Sizanani was created by a partnership involving three organizations:
HIV South Africa (HIVSA), an independent organization that provides social
support for adults and youth who are under the care of the Perinatal HIV
Research Unit (PHRU) of Soweto's Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital (the
nation's largest), which operates through community-based clinics, and
World Camps, Inc., a newly formed American venture, created specifically
for the purpose of developing camp as an experience for HIV/AIDS-affected
young people in African countries. World Camps is the dream-child of Reston,
Virginia, attorney Philip Lilienthal, whose life-long commitment to camping
has been shaped by three generations of family experience in running the
well-known and highly regarded Camp Winnebago on Maine's Echo Lake. The
operation is like a three-legged stool — HIVSA provides the local
institutional base; PHRU's community clinics provide contact points for
families; and World Camps provides the camp expertise.
The vision of the three partners is for Camp Sizanani to become a continuing
model for several more camps around South Africa — and if successful,
for the continent itself. Planning for a follow-up camp for about 150
girls to be held March 27 through April 8 is already underway. Four more
camps will be held in 2004, eventually involving some 850 to 1,000 youth.
HIVSA hopes to extend the camps by branching out to the neighboring countries
of Namibia, Lesotho, and Swaziland. Each camp expects to have thirty staff
— with a growing number of home-trained South African staff, but
with a continuing cadre of trained American counselors as well.
Camp Sizanani, whose per camper program costs (exclusive of counselor
training, transportation, and administration) run to $15 per child per
day, has been launched largely by tapping the pocketbooks of neighbors,
friends, local service clubs, and parents of Winnebago campers. But the
uniqueness of the idea has begun to attract the attention of USAID and
some foundations. The camp experience for African youth feels like an
idea whose time has come.
HIV/AIDS Impact
According to Lilienthal, World Camps got its start as the outgrowth
of a personal, life-long dream of returning to Africa to "do something
worthwhile." He served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia in
the mid-1960s, where he had conducted several camps for children during
his two years there. A primary function of each new Camp Sizanani is to
help HIV/AIDS-affected children increase their awareness of the disease,
provide accurate information to combat the urban mythology surrounding
it, and cope with its social effects — whether as a personal health
issue or because of its impact on families and communities.
As most Americans are now heart-sickeningly aware, sub-Saharan Africa
has been laid waste by HIV/AIDS. At least a third of the population of
more than thirty countries has been affected by the disease. Once the
transition is made from HIV to full-blown AIDS — the normal course
of events outside the U.S. — there is no protection against an opportunistic
infection. Indeed, life expectancy for children in South Africa, as in
many other African nations, is now decreasing. According to PHRU, a fifteen-year-old
South African today has a 70 percent lifetime risk of AIDS, and Baragwanath
Hospital's community clinics see more than 12,000 infected women every
year.
"Sizanani will provide important social contact for children whose
families may be ostracized or isolated because of the stigma attached
to HIV infection," Lilienthal notes. "These new campers have
begun learning important communication and social skills. They have worked
to understand their own cultural heritage and strengthened their coping
skills for living in an HIV/AIDS-afflicted society. We want to create
that possibility for as many as we can."
The Sizanani experience does not confront the reality of HIV/AIDS directly,
however, beyond education about HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention, according
to camp counselor Erica Phillips. She is a former Peace Corps volunteer
in Niger and currently works as a New Jersey farmer, with an itch to return
to Africa as an agriculturalist. A plus for Camp Sizanani over other contexts
in which South African youth learn about HIV/AIDS is that they learned
it in a context of trust from people like Erica, who daily demonstrated
that they cared about the kids. One camper's apt comment, as shared by
his counselor Katlego Skosana in a recent Christian Science Monitor article
about Camp Sizanani was this: "When we [campers] first came here,
we never thought we'd get so much love from strangers, but it's true that
we got love and we felt special."
The camp's core educational vehicle was provided by the sheer fun of
camp activity. The games and life-skill sessions were constructed around
everyday South African life, where the ostracism and stigma that often
go with a diagnosis of HIV/AIDS are commonplace. Campers from families
who were affected, or who were themselves "on meds," were "treated
just like everyone else," says Phillips: "No big deal."
A camp experience for youth whose lives are daily touched by HIV/AIDS
is, of course, not a public health solution for the millions who are affected.
Indeed, all too many members of the generation just ahead of those who
attended Camp Sizanani have already been infected or wiped out. But the
camp experience does provide opportunities to teach important lessons
about the dangers of unprotected sex, learn good health habits, lend support,
show caring, and give young Africans a chance to develop better coping
and decision-making skills. Michelle Schorn, director of community programs
for HIVSA, says her agency is "committed to providing a resource
for these young people, and to raising awareness of their tremendous value
as a national resource. This disease has already devastated Africa, but
much can be done to help the next generation acquire the skills needed
to make a contribution. And just as important, we want them to enjoy themselves,
learn, grow, and equally important, just be kids for a while."
Just Like Your Average Camp
A typical day at Camp Sizanani is hard to differentiate from any other
at any independent YMCA, Boy Scouts of America, or church camp that many
of us might find familiar. Up by 7:15 a.m. for wake-up and cabin inspection,
the boys would down an 8:15 breakfast, followed by a day-long rotation
of created activities (sports, swimming, circle games) among randomly
selected age-group divisions (named for African game animals), and punctuated
by snacks, rest time, and meals. (For many the three-meal-a-day regimen
was a complete novelty.) All day long the soccer balls flew, the paint
pots sloshed, and the pool overflowed with splashing. As in all camps,
the recreational philosophy at Camp Sizanani was "keep ‘em
moving." An evening assembly focused on story-telling, singing, and
reflections on the day to help unwind charged-up campers and get them
ready for the strict 9:00 p.m. bedtime. Two favorite activities were games
of musical chairs — which these youth had never played before and
enjoyed hugely — and learning to swim. Swim instructor Dale Dunlop,
a retired pension fund administrator dubbed Mkhulu ("Grandpa")
by his charges, proudly sported "a 100 percent success rate"
among the urban boys — most of whom had never been in a pool before.
"World Camp's whole philosophy, throughout these camps," says
Lilienthal, "is to provide activities that appeal to specific interests
in kids. We want participation that appeals to the imagination, so we
use the arts, nature, games, and theater — not just to teach, but
to educate in terms of the Latin word's root meaning, educere, which means
to lead out. We are always looking to find what's inside the child. We
use competition and cooperation as mutually reinforcing contexts for group
activity. For us, it's all process."
Sizanani's counselors were specially trained for their roles just the
week before the camp began in sessions led by Michael Brandwein, the highly
regarded developer of training experiences for camp, education, and youth
services, as well as author of three successful books on running camps.
Brandwein brought to his first African training event a wealth of experience
gleaned on five other continents. He saw his first task as proving to
the Sizanani counselors the value of what the campers themselves would
be engaged in — learning by doing. "For the first fifteen minutes,"
he relates, "we had them play two initiative-type, problem-solving
games. Without explaining why, we taught them the first game using a didactic
style, providing specific directions and tactics to solve the problem.
The second game was taught using a Socratic, questioning style, giving
staff the responsibility for defining the problem, discussing their options
— in short, learning by doing — the essence of camp. They
saw that while both games were fun, the second approach also taught essential
life skills."
In keeping with the wisdom that wherever you may go, "camp is camp,"
Brandwein's training was predicated on the sound assumption that "children,
whatever their background or experience, would respond positively if treated
with real respect, lots of care, and warmth. We were delighted to discover
that our assumption was true. The camp environment is like super-enriched
soil. Despite initial barriers, it can grow incredible things at remarkable
speed."
Brandwein's training sessions had a big impact on the counselors, who
found his amazing enthusiasm for the kids infectious. All the staff from
overseas paid their own way to South Africa to be a part of the first
Camp Sizanani. Several have commented in interviews that they found the
most valuable skill they learned was "just listening." "When
we are in another country and culture where we don't speak the language,"
Brandwein says, "it makes us focus on doing what leaders should do
most — listen intently. And if we don't understand the words right
away, we can listen not just with our ears, but with our hearts."
Dale Dunlop's moving account of helping an eight-year-old boy through
a bout of homesickness during the first couple of days still makes him
tear up.
Counselor Brandy Hosso, a Phoenix schoolteacher who had been a Peace
Corps Volunteer in South Africa, remembers Brandwein's insistence on using
praise as a motivator. Many campers, she discovered, came from home environments
where corporal punishment was the rule. Not surprisingly, she found that
when praise was called for, it was a much better motivator than what they
were accustomed to experiencing.
Follow Up: Kids Clubs
The Camp Sizanani partnership is determined that what has been accomplished
will not be a one-shot deal. Campers have already been invited to attend
a follow-up weekend at a Saturday Kids Club — to reinforce their
experience, promote the continuation of the camp ethos, and spread the
word to other potential campers. Kids Club sessions will not only continue
to support the values learned at camp but will also serve to identify
key potential leaders among returned campers, who can help their fellow
campers extend the impact Sizanani had on them.
World Camps has decided that, for the foreseeable future, each successive
camp will serve a whole new population of youth — there will be
no repeat attendees. This way, in addition to reinforcing the camp experience,
the Kids Clubs will help former campers deal with the fact that they will
not be returning to camp. Kids Club programs are to be mounted in residential
areas, using the clinic network of Baragwanath Hospital as a base. As
noted by HIVSA CEO Steven Whiting, "The Kids Clubs will provide continuing
support to the children as well as to their parents and guardians. Once
again, through the use of sport, art, and drama, these children will have
an opportunity to develop their communication and social skills, as well
as receive ongoing education and awareness around HIV/AIDS . . . . In
a safe and secure environment, these vulnerable children can learn about
love, trust, patience, acceptance, sharing, and enjoyment, and that someone
out there really cares about them."
In Parting, "Thank You"
One of the last activities the Sizanani campers participated in was
an arts project in which they composed their own "thank you"
messages to the many individuals — in several countries —
who had made contributions to making the camp possible. Unfettered by
any preconceptions of what a "bread and butter note" should
look like, they folded construction paper into myriad shapes and made
liberal use of paints, crayons, magic markers, glue, glitter, pens, and
pencils. Many not only signed their names but included addresses as well,
with a plea to "Please write me a letter." Some cards came from
groups, some from individuals. Almost every camper either wrote a letter
of his own or signed a collaborative effort. All came from the heart.
This exercise in reaching out was all the more endearing because of
the obvious effort it took the campers to come to terms with an unfamiliar
language and their complete success in delivering an emotional message
that truly revealed their gratitude. Here are just a few notes of thanks.
"Thank you for donating money to us and I know you have faithful
hearts." — The Mighty Boys of Camp Sizanani
"I like this camp because it is the first camp I ever went to."
— Your child, Molatsi
"Thank you World Camp. You took us as your children." —
Richmond Moshidi
"My name is Nhlanhla Khumalo. Thanks for what you did for us and
for giving us an opportunity to express our talent . . . Thanks a million
times."
And finally this unsigned gem, perhaps from a future philosopher: "Soul
love and respect bring people together. Make the freedom to change, and
we [are] all free from dark to lightness." Somehow, one cannot but
believe that Nelson Mandela himself would be proud of that one.
Originally published in the 2004 July/August
issue of Camping Magazine. |