Photo Gallery
Posted September 16, 2010
Glimpses of life and ministry in Tsietsi, an impoverished community in Johannesburg.
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In Johannesburg’s Tsietsi squatter camp, the adult generation is dying away, mostly due to AIDS. Children must fend for themselves, hungry, uneducated and forced into a life of crime or prostitution simply to survive.
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The parents of Puleng and her four siblings died of AIDS-related illnesses. Although they live with their grandmother, Puleng’s 13-year-old sister is the primary caregiver for the family.
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Children who go to school are much less likely to end up on the streets or in jail, says Ella Jansen van Vuuren, who started a ministry to care for orphans in Johannesburg.
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Ella Jansen van Vuuren (seated, in green) and Jacky Maleka (standing, in black) started a day care and feeding program to help preschool and school-aged orphans.
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Jacky Maleka helps a child put together a puzzle at the day care in Tsietsi. Currently, about 10 children attend the day care.
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After school, older students come to the day care building to receive a nourishing meal before heading home.
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Ella Jansen van Vuuren visits with a student who just arrived at the day care for a meal.
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Lebou is an orphan who attends the Mohau day care. Through the help of a sponsor from a local Baptist church, Lebou is provided with clothes, meals and even a gift and cake for her birthday.
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Children on the streets of Tsietsi squatter camp play with push-cars they’ve constructed from milk jugs, plastic and wire.
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The orphans are “generally very happy” and “amazingly easy-going in spite of their circumstances,” says Ella Jansen van Vuuren, who started Mohau.
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“If you see these children, they’re smiling,” Ella Jansen van Vuuren says of the orphans she works with. “If ever there’s an encouragement for me, it’s that if these children in their circumstances can really have the joy of the Lord, how much more for us?”
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