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    Siyakhana food garden serves as model to other poor areas

    Professor Michael Rudolph, head of Community Dentistry and Health Promotion Unit at Wits University, started the Siyakhana food garden project in 2005 in collaboration with several non-governmental organisations such as BHP Billiton Development Trust, Cape Gate, Food and Trees for Africa, and Party Design, which cares for people living with AIDS.
    Siyakhana food garden serves as model to other poor areas

    Four years later, the Siyakhana project functions as a model and demonstration site for other similar initiatives in Gauteng and surrounding provinces. What began as an arid and infertile one-hectare site in Bezuidenhout Park, allotted by Johannesburg City Parks, is now a thriving profusion of nourishment. Adopting the Permaculture approach, the rock-strewn and clay-filled ground was vividly transformed into rich, fertile soil through dedication, time and a great deal of effort.

    The project also takes care of the environment and healthy living. Currently, it provides fresh vegetables, herbs, grains and legumes to nine active organisations in Early Childhood Development and NGOs providing home based care to the less fortunate.

    The National Development Agency demonstrated its belief in the project by granting R 733 150 in 2007, which was used to help pay stipends, buy seeds, a vehicle used for deliveries and provide necessary training.

    With South Africa's unemployment rate estimated at 23.5% and a slowing growth rate due to the economic recession, South Africans need to look for alternative solutions for poverty alleviation. Social mobilisation such as Siyakhana has ensured that those without employment are still able to put bread on the table.

    Visit www.siyakhana.org for more details.

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