The Radio Workshop:
Giving Young People a Voice

Archive for the ‘Children’s Rights’ category

Youth rise against gender based violence

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Valentine’s Day took a different turn this year. A global awareness campaign called “One Billion Rising” used the day of love and romance to protest sexual violence against women and children through dance and street action. Ten girls from the Ons Plek project in Cape Town, turned up the volume on the campaign theme song and danced to say NO to rape and sexual violence against women and children.

Listen to the entire episode by clicking on the track below. Feel free to download the track or share via Facebook or Twitter.

The Radio Workshop would like to thank Ons Plek for their bravery and for sharing their insights with us.

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And that’s all from this week’s Radio Workshop!

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Manenberg youth report on children’s welfare

Theslin

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Neglect and abuse are some of the harsh realities many children live with. Youth reporters from Manenberg in Cape Town were brave enough to share their stories and experiences with us. They also went to Child Welfare and interviewed social workers there to get some answers to their questions.

Listen to the entire episode by clicking on the track below. Feel free to download the track or share via Facebook or Twitter.

The Radio Workshop would like to thank Keith, Bronwyn, Nikita, Brandon and Theslin for sharing their stories with us and doing it with such courage.

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Bronwyn

And that’s all from this week’s Radio Workshop!

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Manenberg youth report on crime in their community

Manenberg youth reporters

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The Children’s Radio Foundation trained a group of young reporters in Manenberg in Cape Town. They discovered they all shared experiences about crime in their community. Armed with their audio recorders they went to their local police station to find out what police were doing about it.

Listen to the entire episode by clicking on the track below. Feel free to download the track or share via Facebook or Twitter.

The Radio Workshop would like to thank the young reporters from Manenberg, Danielle, Rufka, Janite, Lorenzo, Bronwyn-Lee, Audrey and Jameel for all their hard work in producing this show. Thanks also to the Druiwevlei Community Centre and everyone at the Manenberg Police Station.

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Manenberg youth reporters at their local police station

And that’s all from this week’s Radio Workshop!

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Why HIV and AIDS is everyone’s business

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Of all the people infected with HIV in the world, 67% live on the African continent. It’s a disease that affects us all, impacting individuals, families, communities and entire countries. The Radio Workshop speaks to young reporters in Zambia, visits a home for HIV affected children in Cape Town and one of the producers of the show records her HIV test for radio!

Listen to the entire episode by clicking on the track below. Feel free to download the track or share via Facebook or Twitter.

The Radio Workshop would like to thank Sister Joy Knighton-Fitt, Mainkonika, Sandra Marunga, Kate Lagwa and all the children at Fikelela Children’s Home for talking to us.

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And that’s all from this week’s Radio Workshop!

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Radio Workshop: Crossing borders to find a home

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Tshiabu Deebu was born in South Africa. Japhia Emori was born in Rwanda but both are challenged about their identity and calling South Africa home. The Radio Workshop spoke to them about the experience of being a foreigner in the only place they really know.

Listen to the entire episode by clicking on the track below. Feel free to download the track or share via Facebook or Twitter.

The Radio Workshop would like to thank Tshiabu Deebu and her mother, and Japhia Emori for sharing their stories with us.

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And that’s all from this week’s Radio Workshop!

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Radio Workshop: Youth Day remembered and reinvented

Imam Rashied Omar

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Stuck in the history books or relevant today? The Radio Workshop talks to a youth leader of 1976 about the student riots that swept through the country. We also meet some young people who build on that legacy, though this time their struggles are different.

Listen to the entire episode by clicking on the track below. Feel free to download the track or share via Facebook or Twitter.

The Radio Workshop would like to thank Imam Rashied Omar, the National Youth Development Agency, and the cast of Bash or be Bashed.

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And that’s all from this week’s Radio Workshop!

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Radio Workshop: Protecting children

Welcome to the Radio Workshop!

Protecting a child––it seems like a simple enough concept, but is it really? The Radio Workshop explored the different ways children feel they are, and sometimes are not, protected.

Listen to the entire episode by clicking on the track below. Feel free to download the track or share via Facebook or Twitter.

The Radio Workshop would like to thank Bulumko and Ayanda Woji, Nikita and Sharon Smallbones for taking part in today’s show.

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And that’s all from this week’s Radio Workshop!

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Radio Workshop: Complaining, whinging or whining?

Welcome to the Radio Workshop!

Unhappy about something in life? Complaining is usually the next thing we do. When our rights have been violated we complain, often through protest. When we get bad service we complain. When our relationships are troubled, yes, we complain. The Radio Workshop got an earful about what is weighing on the minds of many South Africans.

Listen to the entire episode by clicking on the track below. Feel free to download the track or share via Facebook or Twitter.

The Radio Workshop would like to thank Nosisa, Wendy and Phambile, Mark and Glynnis for talking to us.

No time to listen to the entire show? Pick and choose what you want to listen to below! Or subscribe to our iTunes podcast to get full episodes delivered to you every week.


And that’s all from this week’s Radio Workshop!

No time to listen to the entire show? Pick and choose what you want to listen to below! Or subscribe to our iTunes podcast to get full episodes delivered to you every week.

What worries me

Gisenyi, Rwanda: A challenge facing many young men in this corner of Rwanda is the difficulty of finding work, and what this means for their ability to assume responsibility for caring for their ageing parents or building a life of their own.  Alexis Niyongombwa is 20 years old. This is his story.

Dodos Twahirwa (20) earns a living as a football coach for the community-based organisation, Vision Jeunesse Nouvelle. He was unable to finish secondary school because his family did not have enough money. Despite his worries, he encourages other young people to complete their high school education.

The interviewed becomes the interviewer

Vestine Nziyandemye

Reuters interviews Vestine; Vestine interviews Reuters!

GISENYI, Rwanda:  In response to a Unicef press release about the World Cup in My Village project, Reuters sent their Rwanda correspondent to Gisenyi to find out more. There he met Vestine Nziyandemye, one of the 15 youth reporters trained by the Children’s Radio Foundation who are producing radio stories about the views and experiences of young people in the area. After Themistocle Hakizimana had put his questions to Vestine and she had dutifully answered them, Vestine took her recorder and asked the Reuters correspondent a few questions of her own!

Here is the audio link to Vestine’s interview with Reuters correspondent, Themistocle Hakizimana, followed by a transcript in English.

Vestine: I’m Vestine, I’m one of the trainees trained by CRF, in radio journalism. Can you kindly introduce yourself to us?

Reuters: I’m called Hakizimana, Themistocle, and I’m working for the British television called Reuters.

Vestine: How did you hear about how these matches were organized here, and what do you think about them?

Reuters: It was all organized by Reuters in London as UNICEF was preparing this project of showing the World Cup to many children.

Vestine: It’s good to see you being a journalist with far more resources than us: what do you think of what you have seen at this stadium?

Reuters: What I have seen is that there are many children and hardly any adults. What I like most about this project is that it has brought World Cup matches to children who would not be able to afford to watch them in other places where they’d have to pay. That is what impressed me most, although I think that many more children would have come compared to the number of children I know live in Gisenyi.

Vestine: There are more children that are going to come later on, they’re still busy doing other jobs at home, but when the match begins they will come. So what would you say to the listeners of CRF?

Reuters: What I’d like to say is that many parents do not give any value to football. I’d like to encourage parents to let their children come and watch football matches because it’s an international game and any child who has that talent can benefit and get inspired by watching the matches.

Vestine: Thank you for coming, and welcome to our stadium, and please give our greetings to other journalists.

And here is an audio recording of the Reuters interview with Vestine, followed by a transcript in English.

Reuters (Themistocle Hakizimana): You’ve introduced yourself, please tell us about the [radio] training you received and are you putting your training into practice?

Vestine: We were trained for several days in how to use this recorder I have. We were trained in how to make stories, and how to make good recordings, and that is what I’m doing here so that they can evaluate me and see if I benefited from their training.

Reuters: Why do you think it was important to involve children in this project?

Vestine: It was good firstly because some children like the profession of journalism, such as me, I have always liked it, even if I hadn’t had the chance of studying journalism. But more importantly it is good that children were involved because it gave them a chance to express themselves. When a child is put in this position it empowers him to be able to do something.

Reuters: What do you think will be the benefit of showing children the matches here, starting with you yourself?

Vestine: It is very good even starting with myself, because there are children who have a talent that needs to be developed. There are times when a child can like football because of a particular player they admired. There are times like now, just before halftime, when there are messages played about nutrition, good water, education, and other subjects, which are good messages for children that they can listen to and can implement after watching the matches.

Reuters: You are a girl, many times in Rwanda, culture does not permit girls to play football. Does this embarrass you?

Vestine: No, it’s not an embarrassment at all because we are at a stage in development it is no longer an embarrassment for a girl to play football. So I think it’s important that girls are also allowed to come to these matches, because the messages that play here are not meant only for the boys.

Reuters: What message or advice do you have for UNICEF about these projects?

Vestine: My first request would be that because of the high levels of ignorance among parents in rural areas, they should be sensitized before matches to let their children come and benefit from the other messages [that are being played at the matches] about things like nutrition. That way the parents would be encouraged to send their children to the matches. The parent will feel that their child is not only coming for the matches or other mischief, but will know that the child will benefit from the messages, and therefore let the child come without any problem.

Reuters: The last question, of the matches that you have seen so far, which did you like most and what did you learn?

Vestine: The match I liked most was the first opening match with South Africa and Mexico. The reason was that the very first goal was from the Africans while the rest of the world thinks that Africa cannot do much. It shows that we are capable and not always needing to depend on the whites.

Find out more about World Cup in My Village