December 2000
One solution developed by church groups in Zimbabwe is to recruit community members to visit orphans in the homes where they live -- either with foster parents, grandparents, or other relatives, or in child-headed households. The visitors, who know their communities well, pay weekly or twice-monthly visits to the neediest families, ensuring that carers and children get the material and emotional support they need in order to keep the household together. Households caring for orphans are provided with clothing, blankets, school fees, seeds and fertilizer as necessary, and communities contribute to activities such as farming communal fields and generating income to support the programme. The programme has recruited some 180 volunteers, who between them help over 2,700 households with orphans. Overall, the programme costs under US $10 per family supported, funds that are provided by an NGO -- the Family AIDS Caring Trust -- and by local churches. This community-driven approach to orphan support has been reproduced all over Zimbabwe, and replicas are now sprouting up in other African countries including Kenya, Malawi and Zambia.