Delano entered a criminal rehabilitation program funded by USAID known as Khulisa - Zulu for “let the young child grow.” Khulisa’s prevention and rehabilitation services steer young South Africans away from crime and target places where young people are in jeopardy of becoming hardened criminals.
The fifteen-week program emphasizes community service so the youth can pay back society. Youngsters also learn to talk about their experiences publicly as they recount their crime and what they have learned to avoid repeating their mistakes.
USAID is working with the South African Department of Justice and nongovernmental organizations to help reform children who take the dangerous step into crime. In its brief six-year history, more than 500 children have been diverted back into productive society by Khulisa.
USAID gave Khulisa a grant to pilot a new rehabilitation program for young offenders ages 12-18 in the Alexandra Township outside Johannesburg. The project, referred to as “New Directions,” is an alternative to the formal criminal system of prison sentences. Programs are based on the principles of “restorative justice” - focusing on the mediated settlement of conflicts arising from crime and resolving underlying problems that caused the crime in the first place.
Now that Delano has graduated from Khulisa’s program, his mother says, “Delano would never have learned remorse and how to take responsibility for his actions, even when making a wrong decision.” Delano has decided he’d like to be a film-maker. Delano says his first offense against the law will likely be his last. He has changed his attitude and started a new way of life.
South Africa has more than 50,000 offenders between the ages of 12-25. The repeat offences rate is exceptionally high, with an estimated 85% of the released offenders relapsing into crime within six months of release. However, this downward spiral is being reversed through Khulisa’s outreach to young people. Hostility and contempt are being replaced with respect for the law of the land and human rights.
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