A Better Life For A Beggar

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A better life for a beggar 74 By tonymac04

A life-changing encounter Hark, hark, the dogs do bark, The beggars are coming to town: Some in rags, and some in tags, And some in velvet gown. - old Nursery Rhyme Beggars are a common sight all over the world, and South Africa is no exception. Almost every intersection in every city in the country has its population of people begging. Most motorists make sure their windows are up and their doors locked when they see the advancing beggars, and sometimes with good reason. There are the women with babies, the elderly with tattered clothes, the sick and the lame, all hoping for someone to notice them, someone to give them a handout. And sometimes they are lucky and a hand emerges from the car window to deposit a few coins into their usually calloused and dirty palms. But for one woman in Pretoria one beggar somehow looked different, looked unique. She made eye contact with him and something shifted in her, something made her look more deeply at this man, and that has made all the difference, both to her and to him. The woman, Isabel Wagner, says she doesn't know what exactly it was that made her look a second time at the man standing in the intersection, but very soon she was embarked on a journey of discovery, the discovery of the man Amos Sibanda and the story of how he had to become a beggar at the intersection of General Louis Botha Avenue and Atterbury Road in Pretoria East.

Amos's Story It turns out that Amos was not mentally deficient, as many who saw his deformed face assumed, nor was he unwilling to work. He was deformed and rendered unable to work through a dreadful accident which cut short his life as a farm foreman and turned him into a really needy person who had to pocket his pride and beg for a living. Amos was born in Musina (formerly Messina) in Limpopo Province in 1978. In common with many, indeed far too many, people in South Africa, his father was unknown to him and his mother died when Amos was just 10 years old. As a result he only managed to get a Grade 4 education, but in spite of this he found work as a labourer on farms in Limpopo Province and eventually he was employed as a foreman on a farm in the Brits district of the North West Province. In October 2005 the accident that

Logo of the Amost Better Life Foundation

Amos Sibanda

See all 10 photos Just another beggar on the street corner? Read on to find out why this man could be a symbol of hope...

changed his life irrevocably happened. His skull was severely fractured and his palate punctured. He was airlifted to hospital where he had to have a tracheotomy, was ventilated and intravenously fed. Most of his lower jaw was destroyed in the accident which left him unable to speak or eat or drink properly. Isabel Wagner After being discharged from hospital Amos could no longer do the kind of work he had been doing on farms and so had to find other ways of making a living. He started by handing out advertising leaflets at intersections, but this work was intermittent and had to start begging to make ends meet. Three years almost to the day Amos ion the doorway of his house in Isabel came into his life and things Mamelodi started to change for the better. As she tells the story on the website of the foundation that has been started to help Amos, she and her family had been going through very bad times and she had started to see a therapist weekly. “Then one morning on my way to my appointment I came to a stop right next to him. I had time to look Gracious and Amos inside their home at him, staring shamelessly. And with my medical background it was obvious that he must have had enormous problems even trying to function at the most basic level. By the time I reached home I knew that I had to help him,” says Isabel on the website. Isabel managed to get a surgeon to operate on Amos, paid for by the foundation she had set up called Amost Better Life Foundation (ABLF). As a result of the operation Amos is able to eat and drink more easily and his speaking has also improved, though it is still rather difficult to understand him. The next operation Amos needs is to rebuild his lower jaw, which was almost entirely destroyed in the accident. This operation will need some highly specialised equipment which will have to be imported. Meanwhile Amos's wife Gracious is pregnant with their second child, due at the end of April. Their first child is a three-yearold boy called Tinos. They live in a rented home in the Pretoria suburb called Mamelodi. Amos continues to stand at the same intersection where Isabel first encountered him, but now he holds a printed, laminated poster advertising the ABLF's website and carrying the message: “Thank you everyone for your contributions. First operation a success!!” instead of the hand-written cardboard one he previously held. Isabel, who does not want to be regarded as a saviour or heroine, would like to see Amos become independent and able to care for his family again, able to feel like a competent human being. Amos himself wants to expand the modest photography business he has started, taking photos of people around Mamelodi and selling them. He has been given an old film camera and so is dependent on processing outlets but hopes to get a digital camera and a computer with a colour printer so that he can become more self-sufficient. Slowly but surely his self-esteem and self-worth are coming back to Amos, though he still has a long way to go.

The busy intersection that is Amos's "workplace"

Amos in the intersection

Amos showing his placard

The end of the story? Amos's story though, should not end there. At least it should help people to see that beggars don't always beg because they are workshy, or have a drinking or drug problem. There are beggars who have genuinely got a problem and the only way they can keep body and soul together is by asking for help in public. And not all beggars are going to spend the money they do get on drugs or

Grameen Bank logo

alcohol. The difficulty of course is in knowing the genuine from the chancer. The Nobel Prize winning founder of the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, Muhammad Yunus has made it a policy that every person in the Bank must lend to one beggar. It was a challenge he issued to the employees of the Bank. At first only a few lent to beggars, but after a while all 27 000 people working for the Bank lent to beggars – lent, not gave. There were no freebies, no handouts. The Bank's policy is to expect the beggars to repay the loans in their own time, at their own convenience, but they have to repay. Grameen Bank now has 100 000 beggars on its books, people who, because of their access to funds, have begun to turn their lives around, to regain lost pride and sense of self-worth. Surely a great way for people to be helped. Beggars don't have to stay beggars, and maybe the story of Amos can be a start of something for the hundreds of thousands of beggars in South Africa. Amost Better Life Foundation - Home Page The Foundation was established to strive towards certain objectives which are broadly defined as the care or counseling of abandoned, abused, neglected, orphaned or homeless children, poor and needy persons and persons in distress as well as physical

Professor Muhammad Yunu, founder of the Bank

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