Location
  • Swaziland
Length
26 - 52 weeks

Program Details

Primary Language
English
Aug 31, 2017
Jan 23, 2013
1 traveler is looking at this program

About Program

Bordered by South Africa and Mozambique, the Kingdom of Swaziland is a small country that suffers from poverty and has the world's highest rate of HIV infection. Volunteers are usually placed in an outreach project in the east of the country called Big Bend. They will often help out with classes, extracurricular activities, and evening shifts in pre-schools and school hostels. Project Trust is looking for highly motivated volunteers who love to work with children and teenagers and isn't afraid for whatever may come their way.

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5.00 Rating
based on 1 review
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  • Housing 4
  • Support 4
  • Fun 5
  • Value 4
  • Safety 5
Showing 1 - 1 of 1 reviews
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Kate
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

The best thing I've ever done!

My weekly working life:

Work in a preschool from 8:00am - 12:00pm.
The children are the cutest, loveliest and cheekiest children I have ever met! I teach them basic English, so we learn colours, letters, numbers, shapes etc... The rest of the time is spent singing, dancing, playing and reading stories. Colouring and crafts they also love and they generally make a mess with paint, glitter glue and anything they can get their mischievous hands on!
Preschool work is brilliant fun, very challenging but tremendously rewarding. You will never feel more loved than you do when you have 60 small children all fighting each other just to get a Hi5 or a hug!

My soup kitchen work is also fantastic - it is much more emotionally challenging than the preschool work because the children you are feeding have nothing in the whole world. Most of them are orphaned and they care for younger brothers and sisters, uneducated and poor they have slim chances of ever bettering themselves.
Handing out the food is something that I enjoy and dislike at the same time; hard to understand but it does make sense! While I feel good for providing these children with a stable meal, I also feel bad when I see them push and shove and fight while we are serving... always desperate to grab anything they can. Here are children who are all as starving as each other, but they are so desperate they will push tiny toddlers out from their way just to get some leftovers. It is heartbreaking.
However they are really brilliant children; I love playing with them after we have served the food, when you look at them all together they look like such a sorry group. But when you begin to play sports, games and sing songs they really come out of themselves and they can be pictures of pure joy despite everything else. They are amazing.

I love Project Trust for giving me this opportunity, and I love my program so much! I may never want to leave Swaziland...
If you ever get a chance to do something like this jump at it, grab it with both hands, and never let go.

What would you improve about this program?
Honestly I can't think of anything I would change. I am free to adapt my program as I please, spend more time at one place than another and I can set up secondary projects. If there is something in my program that I am unhappy with (in my day to day routine) I have the ability to change it.
If I HAD to change one thing it wouldn't be about the program but I would make my preschool larger and better resourced. The school is very basic and there is basically nothing in the way of monetary support or resource donations, we scrape by on the little we have and it would be incredible if we had the ability to do more with the children.
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