The story of Mercy: uBuntu in action
"...i'ts often those with the least to give
that in fact offer the most..."
Whilst in dire need
himself, Amos
Sibanda has
opening his doors and heart to another persson in need:
Mercy.
(This account of Mercy was written by Tony
McGregor, who is also involved in the
Amost Better Life Foundation) for more information see:
http://hubpages.com/hub/An-orphan-called-Mercy
Mercy (n) - something to be grateful for
(From the 2006 Concise Oxford Dictionary)

Mercy (Left) and Amos, Gracious &
Mercy
Mercy is also the name of a young woman who
would seem, on the face of it, not to have too much to be
grateful for herself.
One thing she does have to be grateful for
is the kindness of Amos Sibanda, the beggar whose life is
slowly being turned around into a positive place with the
help of Ms Isabel Wagner and the Amost Better Life
Foundation that she started in order to help Amos. Amos's
story is the subject of the Hub "A better life for a
beggar."
Mercy had been working as a child minder for
a family in the township of Mamelodi, next door to Amos
and his family.
The child Mercy was minding, however,
reached an age when Mercy's services were no longer
needed and so she no longer had a job or a place to
stay.
Amos and his wife Gracious took Mercy into
their modest home, in the true spirit of uBuntu, or
African humanism. This was in December of
2008.
Since then Gracious herself lost her own
second baby, called George, who was still-born earlier
this April.
Mercy' story
Mercy was born on 19 August 1994 somewhere
in the South African province of KwaZulu-Natal, often
simply called "KZN."
Mercy doesn't know where she was born
exactly, and has no memory at all of her parents, because
her mother died not long after Mercy was born, either of
full-blown AIDS, or of one of the many opportunistic
diseases that often attack people who are HIV-positive.
We don't know and perhaps never will.
Mercy came to Pretoria in the company of a
woman who she called her sister, but who was most likely
not a blood relative at all. This woman worked in the
same house that Mercy was employed in and when that
family moved, Mercy's "sister" left Pretoria to go to
Johannesburg in search of better employment, leaving
Mercy with Amos and Gracious.
I met Mercy recently at the home of Isabel
Wagner (form the
Amost Better Life Foundation) to try to get her story, to try to
understand what life is like for one of the estimated 1.2
to 3.4 million AIDS orphans in South
Africa.
Mercy is a quiet, seemingly self-assured
young woman whose tranquil exterior must hide a seething
mass of confusion, fear and doubt.
Unfortunately Mercy's story is not an
unusual one, except in one regard - she has been taken in
by sympathetic and caring people, not left to fend for
herself in a hostile world.
A
bureaucratic limbo
In South Africa during the apartheid years
it was very common for births among the rural African
people not to be registered. They generally lived far
away from the offices of the Department of Home Affairs
which is responsible for all citizen's information like
births and deaths. So the cost and inconvenience of
registering a birth was not offset by any perceived
benefits and people just went on with their lives. After
all, it doesn't take a piece of paper to tell me I am
alive, does it?
In the new, democratic South Africa,
however, the lack of a birth certificate has become a
huge disadvantage.
With a birth certificate a person cannot
vote, cannot claim disability grants or old age pensions,
or obtain that very important document in South Africa,
the Identity Document, usually referred to as the ID
Book.
This document opens many doors, enables a
citizen to participate fully in all kinds of bureaucratic
things, and without it one is relegated to a sort of
limbo, a shadowy non-existence, because one is not
recognised by the bureaucracy as a person at
all.
This is the problem face by Amos, Gracious
and Mercy. None of them has a birth certificate and so
none of them has an Identity Document, which means that
Gracious and Amos can get no official support in their
caring for Mercy. A grant is available to people who care
for children, but only if they have the recognition of
the ID Book.
Living
in a shack

Amos and Gracious live in a small shack in
the property of a landlord in the Mahobe area of
Mamelodi. There are about a dozen other shacks on the
property, all paying rent to the landlord. The rents,
depending on the size of the shack, are around R700,00
per month. There is no running water in Amos's shack,
they have to fetch water from a communal tap some
distance away.
The shack itself is not well ventilated and
is freezingly cold in winter and boiling hot in summer.
Not a comfortable place for two adults, a teenager and a
toddler.
[ READ MORE ABOUT
AMOS SIBANDA ]
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