Tom Hanks and Kristine Pearson holding a Freeplay windup radio
Kristine Pearson with Tom Hanks, who knows the power of radio

Tackling Energy Poverty

All posts tagged by South Africa

Go Bafana Go!

June 11, 2010

Bafana Bafana fans

Written by Kristine Pearson.

I am feeling very emotional today.  When I first came to South Africa in 1986, it was the world’s pariah.  Today we welcome the world.

South Africa was part of a three-month journey on my own that took me across east and southern Africa. I fell in love with Africa – especially South Africa. Two years later I emigrated from California. I’ve been here ever since sitting in a ringside seat to history.

South Africa was an entirely different country then.  The apartheid government ruled with an iron fist, thousands of political prisoners were jailed, international companies were divesting, sanctions were growing tighter and it was the height of the state of emergency.

Now, I’m having a hard time coming up with the words to describe the feelings of being a part of this nation.

To be attending the World Cup in Soccer City, Soweto, is a thrill,  an honour for me, second only to being there the day Nelson Mandela was released from prison in 1990 and voting in the 1994 election.

Soccer fever is now gripping our rainbow nation.

Go Bafana go!

Filed under: Staff update — Tags: , , , , , — Kristine Pearson @ 9:59 am
The Hope of a Bright Future

March 25, 2010

A head of household safely reading with her new Lifelight

A granny enjoys reading a Bible with her new Lifelight

Written by Kristine Pearson

I remember in 1995 when the first tin shacks went up in the Joe Slovo informal settlement not far from what is now Johannesburg University (formerly Rand Afrikaans University). It made headlines as local residents fought against a ‘squatter camp’ going up in the empty field in their neighbourhood. Fifteen years and 20,000 residents later, Joe Slovo remains unelectrified with limited services, although it does have running tap water and toilets.

We brightened the lives of 40 mainly granny-headed families who use candles or paraffin (kerosene) wick lamps for lighting with Lifelights. They all feel nervous and stressed about the use of candles and paraffin because of how easily they can tip over and start fires. The cramped makeshift houses are tight next to one another like rabbit warren, with very narrow walkways. The walkways in most parts are covered by carpet under-felt. This is the first time I’ve seen this in an informal settlement. Fires are common resulting in dire consequences, sweeping through the settlement at terrifying speed.

Project Manager Chhavi Sharma with Assistant Research Aaliya Sadruddin

Project Manager Chhavi Sharma with Assistant Research Aaliya Sadruddin

Our partner organisation, Children of Fire, which does heroic work with victims of fire, identified the beneficiary families and we conducted a training session at a school outside Joe Slovo’s perimeter. Accompanied by our project manager, Chhavi Sharma and intern researcher Aalyia Sadruddin, after the distribution we visited with a couple of the grannies in their homes.

This is is 62-year-old granny and former domestic worker, Eveline, who is one of Joe Slovos residents who lives in the centre of the settlement. She’s seen many fires over the years and was very pleased to have a Lifelight.

Children promise to ‘study their way out of poverty’

December 8, 2009

The most rewarding aspect of my job is talking to and getting to understand those Lifeline Energy serves. Out of the more than 250 young people we met, all study to candles, either individually or in pairs and the study ethic is strong. This is also an area with an astonishingly high crime rate, including robbery, rape and murder. To a child, every one was afraid to venture out at night. They said that the Lifelights would help them to feel more secure, especially when they had to venture to their outside pit latrines after dark.

There were many young people who really impressed me despite the loss of their parents and the poverty in which they live.

Zanele, 17 with Lifelight

Zanele, 17, high school student with Lifelight

This amazing young woman, Zanele, 17, is an excellent high school student in a rural village. Her best subject is geography and she hopes to attend university on a bursary. The Gogo, 46, looks after 4 children. Zanele is eldest. After school she washes her uniform, helps cook, garden and clean and then tries to study with the others to one candle.

Xolani, 13 South Africa’s Next Chess Champion

Xolani, 13 South Africa’s next chess champion with Lifelight

Meet South Africa’s next chess champion, Xolani, 13. This engaging young man who excels at maths and science took up chess in Themalethu Home Based Care’s after school chess programme. Xolani lives with his Gogo (whose pension they live on) and 6 other children and told me all 7 share a candle to study. His grandparents fled the civil war in Mozambique in the 80’s. He speaks Shangani, Swazi and English.

6 Learners Study by with the Lifelight

Study Group with the Lifelight

This is a study group in one of the villages I visited that is now using their new Lifelight instead of a candle. They told me that they planned to ‘study their way out of poverty’. Thembalethu, will track academic performance over the next few months to see if studying to clean lighting really does improve grades as the expect that it will.

The devastation of HIV/AIDS in the Nkomazi District

December 1, 2009

We’ve just completed two days (about half) of the Lifelight distributions in support of vulnerable children and caregivers in the South Africa’s Nkomazi District which has a population of between 500-700,000 depending on what you read.  Neighbouring Swaziland has the world’s highest HIV rate and thousands of children have migrated to South Africa.  Although some are South African over many generations, we also spoke with Shangani-speaking families of refugees who fled across the border with Mozambique during the 20 year civil war that ended in 1992. The majority are Swazi and the local first language is Swazi (similar to Zulu) and even though English is taught in school I require an interpreter as only a handful of the children can understand or speak English. The ones that do, I interview one-on-one while the paperwork is being carried out.

Jeanette studying to a candle

Jeanette studying to a candle

This is 14-year old Jeanette who lives with her 6 cousins and Gogo (grandmother) & Mkulu (grandfather) whose 3 daughters passed away from ‘illness’. The likelihood of it being HIV/Aids is high since prevalence of the disease in this area is an estimated 45-50%. All 7 pupils study on the floor to an inefficient candle flame. I gave her a lift home in my mini-van taxi to Jeppe’s Reef and asked her if she could please show me how she did her homework.  Like all the children I’ve come across here, she studies on the floor. The children in this household were all born in Swaziland; therefore, they do not receive government social grants.  However, the elders receive a pension.

Our visit was on World AIDS Day, which was a sharp reminder of how devastating HIV/AIDS is, especially today.

Filed under: Updates from Field — Tags: , , , , — Kristine Pearson @ 7:23 pm
First big Lifelight project launches in South Africa

November 29, 2009

Written by Kristine Pearson

We set off this morning from Johannesburg to launch our first big Lifelight project in a largely unknown part of South Africa – the Nkomazi district, an area bordering Swaziland and Mozambique. US intern, Tina Bigley and I (with a bit of help) packed up a VW Kombi, aka mini-bus taxi (more like a Winnebago to me!) loading it with 400 Lifelights & solar panels & Lifeline radios to distribute to child-headed and other vulnerable families.

Loading Lifelights at the Johannesburg office

Loading Lifelights at the Johannesburg office

Along the road lots people put their thumbs out thinking we were a taxi until they saw me at the wheel!

Kristine Pearson in a traditional Swazi reed and thatch hut at the Swazi Matsamo Cultural Centre

Kristine Pearson in a traditional Swazi reed and thatch hut

As we drove from the Highveld (high plains) to the Lowveld, a long, but pleasant eight hour journey it became progressively more lush and humid. It was reassuring to see that the rains have been good so far this season since South Africa is a major food grower.

Our local partner is Thembalethu Home Based Care, which does amazing work by providing support and care in an area with upwards of 50% HIV/AIDS. We dropped off the Lifelights at their office in Schoemansdal with the distributions to start in the morning. After dark we arrive at the Jeppe’s Reef Border Post to stay in a traditional Swazi reed and thatch hut at the Swazi Matsamo Cultural Centre.

Addressing issues on Energy Poverty

April 16, 2009

Kristine Pearson, CEO of Lifeline Energy

Kristine Pearson, CEO of Lifeline Energy

Written by Kristine Pearson

I have lived and worked in Africa for 20 years and expect to live the rest of my life here. During this time I have spoken to hundreds, maybe even thousands of orphans and vulnerable children and young people who live in unimaginable poverty. How they muster the courage to cope with the odds stacked so heavily against them, I don’t know. I have worked in communities in Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Kenya and Mozambique – all countries where families have been devastated by HIV/AIDS. I have witnessed the intentional lack of coordination and cooperation of aid agencies many times first hand.

Last weekend I read Home TruthsFacing the Facts on Children, AIDS and Poverty which summarises two years of research and analysis of AIDS policies, programmes and funding. Addressed mainly to policymakers in ‘heavily burdened’ (poor) countries, it also is relevant to international donors, children’s agencies, NGOs and civic groups. The report makes a concrete case for redirecting the response to HIV/AIDS to address children’s needs more effectively and keeping orphans and other vulnerable children in community-based settings. It was written by the Joint Learning Initiative on Children and HIV/AIDS (JLICA). JLICA (don’t worry, I will limit my use of acronyms) boasts an impressive list of organisations, sponsors, academics, researchers, policy makers – about 300 contributors in total. I even know some of them. Surprisingly business and social entrepreneurs are excluded from the alliance. Surely, we would have roles to play?

Actually, there is very little in the 64 pages that I disagree with. It calls for a long overdue and fundamental shift in international and local responses to the epidemic’s impact on children, families and communities. It acknowledges the funds wasted and the litany of mistakes and failed approaches to help children affected by AIDS and that community responses were misunderstood. It analyses what was unsuccessful and why and sets out a solid framework outlining four streams of future action. Based on evidence and research, it identifies what needs to be done and declares principles to be observed.

Curiously, it omits any references to energy poverty, which is central to progress and impacts education, health and social services. It also relies heavily on UN action for implementation. I hope that it will rely on the experience and wisdom of local communities as it promises to.

This is a seminal document, given the depth and severity of the problem for future generations of children. Donors and investors are trending toward a demand for financial, not just social returns on their investments. The consequences for not getting approaches right in an age of declining funds and increased competition for funding could be catastrophic.

But what left me feeling bereft about this important report is that like so many policy focused documents – it is uninspiring and dry. It uses complicated, confusing words and phrasing when in plain speaking would do. These academic style reports are important to quantify and measure ‘the problem’, but I dislike that anonymous children/poor people are ultimately nameless statistics to monitor going up or down.

What I have also learned is that these children and young people are far more capable, courageous, hard-working, resilient, dignified, earnest and resourceful than they are given credit for. The burden of poverty falls harder on girls than boys. I have seen how heartbreaking and destabilising AIDS is to families. I have spoken with children who feel humiliated because they can’t read money; to girls who have been embarrassed that their clothes are dirty; to young people who cast their eyes self-consciously to the ground because they are too poor to offer you a place to sit down because they have no furniture.

The report assumes that the reader is both highly educated and also understands what it is like to live in extreme poverty. I’m not sure they do. The JLICA report speaks of these children, women, families, communities dispassionately throughout.

I’d like to raise my hand for making these parched documents more inspirational and less detached. They’re just too important not to.

**** Kristine Pearson is the CEO of Lifeline Energy, which works across sub-Saharan Africa with a focus on orphans and other vulnerable children, rural women, refugees and people who are ill.