£5 For 5 Could you live on £5 a week?
Did you do the £5 For 5 Day challenge? Isobel Webster did a weekly shop to show people at Greenbelt Festival what they could expect to eat for an entire week. Here she explains her experience.
Umthombo has seen a rise in young women living on the streets due to domestic violence and poverty. Many of these women, with limited options, are often forced into sex work or become dependent on drugs and exploitative relationships.
Umthombo’s outreach workers visit the streets to build trust and offer a pathway to recovery, starting with detox and extending to a comprehensive programme aimed at helping them reclaim their independence.
Umthombo offers a two-week detox programme in a serene game reserve, providing a peaceful environment away from the streets.
This includes a seven-day medical detox followed by a natural detox process, helping women take the first steps toward overcoming substance dependency. This unique setting offers them the opportunity to reflect and reset, setting the stage for their journey to recovery.
Umthombo offers a pathway to recovery
— — — — — — —
After completing detox, women are invited to join Umthombo’s Independent Living Programme, which provides six months of supported accommodation. During this time, women receive vital life skills training to help them live independently and safely care for their children. The programme includes support for securing identification documents, education, and preparation for employment.
“Umthombo helped me a lot. Now, my life has changed. I no longer use drugs, and I live in a proper place. I’ve been provided with food, and they have paid for my room. They also helped me get an identity document, and I am on a waiting list to be enrolled in the Work Readiness Programme.” A participant in the Umthombo Independent Living Programme
Through these efforts, Umthombo enables young women to break free from exploitation and dependency, reclaim their independence, rebuild their lives and create a stable future for themselves and their children.
Amos Trust is supporting Umthombo’s work with young women living on the streets of Durban. This includes a detox programme in a peaceful environment to help women overcome substance dependency and their Independent Living Programme, which provides accommodation, life skills training, and support to help them rebuild their lives and regain independence.
Photography: Simphiwe Mdunge and Alison Sloane
Take a look through our range of resources, including blog posts, downloads and products, to find out more about our Street Justice work.
Welcome to the first On Her Terms update of 2019. This year marks 30 years since the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. This landmark in children’s rights has remained a hugely important reference point for those working for justice for children and young people.
16th June marks the 43rd anniversary of the Soweto Uprising. In 1976, whilst South Africa was under apartheid rule, thousands of black school children marched in Soweto to protest about the poor quality of their education and to demand that they be taught in their own language. Amos Trust works alongside three partners across the continent, in Tanzania, Burundi and South Africa, and we’ll be sharing stories from our partners across the weekend. Full details.
In our August update, On Her Terms — Lead, Karin Joseph writes about her first visit to Karunalaya, Amos’ partner in India, and explains Diwali Dinners — our new fundraiser which we’re launching this October. She shares news of our first supporter trip to Tanzania to visit our partner Cheka Sana and reveals the next Amos Book Club selection.
On Saturday 18th January 2020, Dieudonné Nahimana, the Founder and Executive Director of Amos’ partner New Generation Burundi, announced his candidacy for the forthcoming Burundian Presidential elections. “In the past 20 years, I have worked to mobilise and train thousands of youth in servant leadership and ethical conduct, and over the years I have felt the pressure from them and personal conviction to rise up to the national level of governance by running for president as an independent candidate. ” Full details.
Selected books, essays, films and podcasts from Audre Lorde to Arundhati Roy; we’ve found that these have provided unique and intersectional perspectives which challenge us and teach us something new. Hand-picked by the Amos team — we hope you’ll enjoy them too. Full details.
“Archbishop Desmond Tutu, South Africa’s ‘moral compass’, has shaped the ethos of Amos Trust, moulded our spirituality and inspired our imagination as much as just about anyone. His theology of hope has called us to seek out the very best sides of our human nature and his example has stirred us to activism. He showed us the power of hope.” We remember Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
Hello. Are you sitting comfortably? Welcome to 6 Stories, a literary update on our work from around the world. As the writer, James Joyce once said, “in the particular is contained the universal.” For what is given as being uniquely ours is often what we most have in common with every other person on this planet.
Amos Trust
7 Bell Yard, London
WC2A 2JR
UK
Telephone:
+44 (0) 203 725 3493
Email:
[email protected]
Registered Charity No.
1164234
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