Our Why

 
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Our Story

How Ikasi Youth was Born…

RANDY’S DREAM (1988 - 2011)

Written by Nathan Roberts – Co-founder of Sibanye Restaurant and Founder of Ikasi Youth NPC

At the age of sixteen, my friend Randy McKnight, a Xhosa boy from Imizamo Yethu Township, dreamed of one day becoming a chef. Just like his hero Jamie Oliver, he took any opportunity that came his way to develop his cooking skills, in the hope that this would bring him closer to his dream. However, what made Randy different from the average youth trying to reach their dreams was that Randy could not read or write.

Growing up under the burden of extreme poverty, Randy often had to look after his sisters while his mother was at work, which meant he was not able to attend school during his formative years. His family ‘support structure’ did more to pull him from his schooling than to support his growth and what made things more difficult the had no resources at his disposal to assist him to keep up. As is so often the case for township youth, his community and school failed him.


Despite this challenging start to life, Randy’s dedication and untameable spirit led him to achieve the ‘impossible’: co-founding Sibanye Restaurant in his township. This achievement proved to other youth in the community that they could move away from the past, rise above adversity and start creating a new South Africa, dream by dream.

Randy tragically passed away from HIV/AIDS in 2011. He was an ‘Everyday Hero’ to us!

In his memory, we have created Ikasi Youth NPC, an organization dedicated to supporting township youth across South Africa. We focus assisting organisations who support youth like Randy to provide them with programs that can help these individuals who are brimming with brightness but do not have the right opportunities to realise their dreams. Our desire is that young adults like Randy will not have to face the same struggles he did or become victims of their circumstances.

Randy’s Restaurant

Ikasi Youth’s flagship initiative is the Everyday Heroes Club. It offers a group of driven youth who have been negatively affected by extreme poverty and/or HIV/AIDS from the Imizamo Yethu community the academic, personal, and community support that Randy so lacked. If given the right support, they could gain the ability to build a significant and meaningful future. We are blessed to help them create this future.

Like Randy, our Everyday Heroes are the faces of the future of South Africa, a new South Africa, and it is our job as the Everyday Heroes Club Team to not let them down.

 
 

Our Challenge

The ‘Why’ behind our work…

Photo: Life in the township (Ashley Newell Photography)

Photo: Life in the township (Ashley Newell Photography)

Many South African township communities are being torn apart by the effects of poverty, violence, mis-education, drug abuse and gangsterism. Youth growing up in these conditions long for positive role models, academic support and guidance but too often this cannot be found. Frequently, they drop out of school, get caught up in gang activities and fall into a life of crime.

Under-resourced and under-financed township-based youth After-school Support Programs across the country aim to assist these youth but face a daily struggle to do so. They have the heart and the drive to make an impact in their communities, but lack the tools to successfully bring about this change. Well-meaning inspirational community change agents become disheartened, despondent and disillusioned due to their ongoing, uphill, losing battle.


 

Below are a couple of youths commenting in their own words on their experiences in the township:

“It's so hard, you have no idea how hard. It used to be nice, but now it's scary. I don't know what's going on, I don't ever feel safe. You just can't stop the gangs, can't go anywhere alone because I don't know what they'll do to me” –Lloyd age 16

“This year I just went to buy some cool drink for my family, and when I was in the shop at the till a robber came in behind me with a gun and said he'd shoot me if I moved. I was so lucky he didn't shoot me when he let me go” –Mmeli age 16

Or watch the video in this paragraph to hear from Lihle what its like growing up in the townships of South Africa.

 
 

Our Approach

The ‘what’ that directs our work…

Photo: Life in the township (Ashley Newell Photography)

Photo: Life in the township (Ashley Newell Photography)

The Everyday Heroes and the Leading Ladies Programs are initiatives developed by Ikasi Youth, with the aim to address the lack of safe after-school support and guidance available to High School Youth living in the township areas.

Our mission is to roll out a comprehensive model of after-school academic and social support in townships across Southern Africa.  The purpose of these after-school programs is to provide the mentorship and guidance required to help learners along their journey through education towards gainful employment.

This is done through equipping organisations already working with these youth with the training, tools and resources to become more successful.

Learn more about ‘our solutions’ coming out of this approach.

 
 

Our Solution

The ‘how’ that shapes our work…

Photo: Life in the township (Ashley Newell Photography)

Photo: Life in the township (Ashley Newell Photography)

We equip organisations, schools and individuals (change makers) to deliver the programs we have developed in their own communities. We do this by providing the “Four M’s” to each partner organisation:

1) Worldclass Program Materials

2) Intensive Training/Mentorship

3) Program Management Tools

4) Ongoing Monitoring and Evaluation


Our three primary initiatives are to:

1) Run a successful pilot centre in Imizamo Yethu

2) Design programs that can be shared

3) Train partner organisations to run their own versions of these programs

To gain an understanding for what it is like to attend one of these programs, watch the video below, shot back in 2013/2014, when it all started.