User:Sandise/The Themba Development Project

The Themba Development Project, founded in 2008, is a Canadian registered Non-Profit Organization (NGO) which works in a variety of communities in South Africa. The core programs of the organization are targeted at improving basic living conditions for the poorest residents of South Africa.

South African programs include:

-Fruit and Nut Bearing Tree Planting to improve available food stocks as well as to protect topsoil from environmental degradation

-Community gardening program which provides vegetable gardening plots and seeds to families facing food insecurity

-Distribution of School uniforms and supplies to families unable to afford basic education

-Youth Leadership Football Program targeted at at-risk youth in the community

-Environmental Awareness Program to teach respect for the environment

-Emergency Housing Program which replaces unsafe shacks with basic houses

The Themba Development Project was founded in 2008 when it's founder, Catherine Robar viewed the substandard living conditions of the people living in Thembalethu, an informal settlement near the city of George in the Western Cape Province. Thembalethu means “Place of Hope” in the Xhosa language and is the current home to the organization's co-founder Gcinisizwe Noyakaza, a member of the Xhosa tribe. The organization is directed by a Canadian Board of Directors however programs are created with the input of the communities in which the development work is targeted. In addition to food insecurity, Thembalethu was named in 2010 as having the highest unemployment rate in South Africa with approximately 80% of it's residents unable to find work.

In 2010 the organization expanded it's programs to include the former Transkei region of South Africa, birth region of former president Nelson Mandela. The Themba Development Project began work in Nqiningana, a tiny village near Lady Frere and Queenstown in the Eastern Cape Province. Nqiningana struggles with a severe lack of rainfall, high unemployment, HIV and Tuberculosis.