Yesterday, Day 4 of the Citizen Mobilization Conference,
participants went on a field trip to visit the J.L. Zwane Memorial Church and
the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) in Guguletu. The J.L. Zwane visit was as
humbling as it was inspiring. Under the leadership of Rev. Spiwo Xapile, the
church has become a beacon of hope in the impoverished community ravaged by
poverty and HIV/AIDS. The local congregation broke ranks with the denomination
leadership to embrace the needy in the community, joining hands with TAC despite
the latter being associated with gay people and prostitutes. J.L. Zwane opened
its doors to the suffering and cared for the dying. Today, it hosts a hospice
and has trained social workers and care givers to walk with the HIV/AIDS
victims in their last days. Some of the lessons we learned from J.L. Zwane:
- We must allow ourselves to trust even the untrustworthy,
for only then do we create space for transformation.
- The local church must support and cover those that step
forward and go and serve in the front lines. The church should be a refueling
station where members come to recharge their batteries before going back to the
battlefield.
- We must deconstruct church hierarchies and make church
relevant to the people’s lived experiences.
- We must be willing to go beyond all boundaries. Having
suffered exclusion ourselves, we should not exclude others.
- Need to link grassroots actors with policy actors.
- We cannot commit to winning an argument and losing a
person.
- God needs a person to go for Him, and I'm that person.
As we left J.L. Zwane, we left behind a beehive of activity.
A TAC workshop on sexual and gender based violence was underway in the hall,
children in the after school programme were enjoying their lunch in the courtyard, some women
were singing melodiously in the sanctuary, and the sick and dying were being
cared for with dignity in the hospice. In other words, the church was doing what the
church was always meant to do – to be the hands and feet of Jesus Christ, engaged
in the work of healing the community, feeding the hungry, spreading hope, and reconciling people to one another and
to God.
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