Young Zambian teens pull together in service program
25 October 2007SINAZONGWE DISTRICT, Zambia — The Tonga tribe has lived in southern Zambia for hundreds of years, and members are proud of their longstanding traditions and strong social codes. But leaders say some of the customs are eroding - young people, for example, no longer seem to respect the elderly.
A new program involving hundreds of young teens working in small groups may help change that - and simultaneously help the youngsters get along better with each other.
"The groups have started with helping old people in the community," said Siankuku Sabantu, a local fisherman.
"This is something that sometime back was normal but in recent years has stopped. Now the youth have again started helping old people by drawing water for them, gathering firewood and cleaning their homes," he said.
The groups are part of what is known in the Baha'i Faith as the Junior Youth Program, a worldwide effort to help young people aged 12 to 15 - "junior youth" - make good moral choices in their daily lives.
Thirty-eight groups have formed in the Sinazongwe District, and they had their official launch earlier this month. They join another 130 groups in other parts of Zambia that comprise as many as 2,000 participants across the nation. Some are members of the Baha'i Faith, but as many as three-fourths are not.
Chief Sinazongwe, a Tonga tribal leader and also a Baha'i, believes the program - where youth offer service to others as well as studying a text - helps give the young teens a "sense of nobility."
"The youth are better behaved," he said, "and a lot of people are noticing it."
"This program," he continued, "is helping them to see what values are important. They are finding a sense of self worth, and realizing that they are important."
Chuungu Malitonga, a member of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Zambia, has been monitoring the development of the Junior Youth Program for the last two years. What's happening in Sinazongwe is not unusual, he said.
The Sinazongwe District in Zambia abuts Lake Kariba, the largest man-made lake in Africa.
Young people perform a traditional dance at a gathering in southern Zambia celebrating a new program organized by Baha'is for youngsters aged 12 to 15.
A trained facilitator, or animator, works with each of the youth groups.
"From the beginning the program asks the junior youth to look at themselves in the context of their societies," he said. "It encourages them to take ownership for the conditions of those societies.... It doesn't take too long for the program to produce the type of results we are seeing in Sinazongwe."
In Zambia, the youth groups meet at least once a week, often on the weekend.
"The two major activities at the moment are study of a text and a service project," said Mr. Malitonga. "They have also undertaken some outings but this is not a strong component yet."
The groups - most have about a dozen members - usually meet in their village, under a tree or in a small hut, for study sessions of two hours or so, using a text specifically developed for the program.
The first book they use tells the story of a young girl and her older cousin who comes to visit for the school holidays. Together the girls discuss their hopes and possibilities for the future. The story is designed to help youngsters develop moral foundations to guide their decisions and direct their actions.
For the service component, some of the activities are planned and some are spontaneous.
"Recently there was a funeral in the village and the members of the group gathered all the firewood and drew all the water for the bereaved family," said Mr. Sabantu. "Another good service they are offering is to maintain a clean environment around the borehole which is the only source of water in the village."
In some villages, the youngsters go to rural hospitals, visit patients and help clean.
The entire Sinazongwe District is rural, with most villagers making a living by fishing - the area abuts Lake Kariba, the largest manmade lake in Africa - as well as farming and herding.
Olivia Hamoonga, 15, a Christian, is one of the participants in the Junior Youth Program in the Sinazongwe District.

