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Raising a nation of good men – a call for national action

A coordinated national preventative intervention that starts with boys and addresses the problem of violence at its root is required.

The statistics on gender-based violence in South Africa are terrifying.

Now, a new programme aims to tackle one of the causes of gender-based violence, by working with high-school boys across the country to help them break free from the rigid stereotypes of masculinity, and raise a nation of good men.

Primestars, the creator of youth development programmes, plans to launch a national movement to raise a nation of good men.

The programme is targeted at grade 8 to 12 boys from more than 200 schools this year, and will include an educational film and toolkit, and ongoing activities to focus on self-awareness, accountability, responsibility, empathy and compassion.

The initiative called What about the Boys? proposes a paradigm shift teaching boys how to inhabit masculinity responsibly. Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, the former deputy president of South Africa and executive director of UN Women, has thrown her weight behind the project.

We need to end gender-based violence in South Africa and the world, and to do that we need boys. We need parents, teachers and young people to educate and be role models to these boys,” she said.

She called on corporates, government and society to join this movement. To facilitate this, participants will be required to take a pledge to create a measurable standard of behaviour that they commit to following.

A mentoring process and a digital platform will ensure that the programme’s teachings are not time-bound, but instead create long-lasting, changing patterns of behaviour. Participating companies will provide male mentors to partner with schoolboys to facilitate continued dialogue and guidance.

To get involved e-mail projects@primestars.co.za.

The initiative called What about the Boys? proposes a paradigm shift teaching boys how to inhabit masculinity responsibly. Photo submitted.

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Clinton Botha

For more than 4 and a half years, Clinton Botha was a journalist at Roodepoort Record. His articles were regularly published in the Northside Chronicle now known as the Roodepoort Northsider. Clinton is also the editor of Randfontein Herald since July 2020. As a sports fanatic he wormed his way into various "beats - as the media would know it - and admits openly that his big love always have something to do with a scoreboard, crowds and usually a ball that hops.
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