Lekkerbly
Township Experience (Cape Town)



go
back
HALF
DAY 9:00am to 1:00pm or 2:00pm to 5:30pm - Included: Walking
Tour
Discover
how the squalor and the deprivation of the townships of a
previously disadvantaged community is being transformed and
provided with modern schools, clinics, electricity, clean
water, liveable homes and sport facilities. Their struggle
against apartheid and their endeavours during these difficult
years to uplift themselves through the establishment of community
centres and informal trading initiatives like “spaza”
shops and “Shebeens”. Get an idea of what is being
done about HIV and Aids through aids clinics, youth centres
and counselling programs.
We visit three areas which affected so-called “non whites”,
namely Black, Coloured and Indian people.
LANGA TOWNSHIP (the sun) Cape Town’s
oldest township established in 1927 where a local community
guide takes you on a walking tour of…
The
infamous “singles quarters* and the hostels, –
a product of the Migrant Workers Laws of the previous regime
which destroyed families and created a dysfunctional society.
The
“new flats” which are the old hostels now converted
into smart new family apartments. A chance for decent family
living.
An
informal settlement, derogatorily called a “squatter
camp” – residents awaiting a
new home.
SETTLERS “The Beverly Hills”
of Langa, built for former civil servants as a smoke-screen
to foreign visitors.
A
community centre, craft market (shop for locally-made arts
and crafts which directly benefit the community), a tavern
(shebeen), a pre-school and a township restaurant where lunch
is an option.
Langa
Taxi Rank – sequel to the Sharpville Massacres of 21
March 1960, as a result of the defiance campaign over the
pass laws, led by P.A.C. leader Robert Sobukwe and local resistance
leader, Phillip Kgosana
Phillipi and Brown’s Farm – a
vast previously “coloured” group area. See many
of the government’s new housing development and discover
why they were classified “coloured” under previous
race laws.
Rylands
A so called Indian Group area, where we get an insight into
their contribution in the struggle against the political,
social and economical injustices of the past.
MEET
THE PEOPLE, FEEL THE WARMTH, DISCOVER THE TRUTH
This tour is a moving, learning experience, where you meet
the real people of the real South Africa. We contribute a
portion of the tour price to community project.



Evening
tour
Be our guest on this unique township experience that begins
at Jethro’s and Sarah’s home with a performance
and tea time. Accompanied by various musicians, »ghetto
poet« Jethro gives us a taste of his art. Later on,
our group moves to Oom Daan and Ma Nuri's house for storytelling
with wit and insight, then to Norm’s Shebeen for a breakdancing
show and interaction with the community. We return to Jethro’s
for dinner, music and conversation. Each week we take a different
walking route around Kalkfontein and meet a variety of the
Kalkfontein’s people.
EVENING
TOUR from 4.30 pm to 11.00 pm
including: transfers return from city bowl, buchu tea, snacks,
traditional potjiekos (vegetable stew cooked on open fire),
braai chicken
Information:
The community of Kalkfontein is one of the most diverse of
the Cape Town townships. It includes Xhosa, Zulu, Khoisan,
Angolan, Coloured and Mozambican residents. Kalkfontein was
established in the late '80s by migrant labourers from rural
Towns and surrounding farms in the Eastern & Western Cape.
Township
Responsible Tourism Policy
Preamble
We are committed to continue the struggle against inherited
poverty and deprivation left behind by the Apartheid Policies
of the past, by spreading the benefits of Tourism to previously
disadvantaged communities in the Townships and on the Cape
Flats.
We will share our skills and knowledge, by connecting communities
with opportunities, funding, facilitation and volunteers.
We will build itineraries to include local enterprises in
craft, food and hospitality. As well as Social-Support projects
and Environmental Resources Centers.
Our
specific policies with regards to Social, Economic and Environmental
Responsibility are as follows.
Social Responsibility.
1. To respect local customs and traditions:
• tourists to dress modestly-avoid large amounts of
very visible, expensive jewellery.
• not to pat young children on the head, which means
bad luck-stunted growth
2. To include on our tours, projects that work in the areas
of health and education.
• the Love Life Center -Youth Development and awareness
programmes on HIV/AIDS
• Volunteering- Providing volunteers to High Schools,
Self-help Housing Schemes and work-place skills development
for job-creation and running of small business.
3. To include regular stops on our tours, to ensure social
interaction between local people and visitors.
• Community Centers
• Schools
• Pubs and Shebeens
• Walking Tours through communities-with their permission.
• To facilitate the further training of local guides
to become Registered Provincial guides-through mentorship
and funding.
4. To employ only registered Tourist Guides, to provide on-going
training in the way we conduct our tours, and to re-emphasis
our Responsible tourism Policy. Where possible, such tourist
guides to be sourced and developed from the townships.
5. To pay employees better than market rates, as well as incentives
for maintaining our ethos of High Professionalism and Responsible
Tourism.
6. To connect local people with funding and facilitation that
exists in the mainstream- for the training of tourist guides
(Tourist Guides Registrar) and the establishment of guest
houses and small businesses(Department of Economic Development
and Tourism)
7. To facilitate the placement of Volunteers at schools, social
and environmental projects, who assist in capacity building
and supplementary support.
8. Include in our tours a 10-minute presentation by the Siyasaga
Township Theatre group – where story-telling is themed
on…
• traditional values and culture
• challenges such as crime and HIV/Aids.
• The history of local people in a political and contemporary
sense. The play-Isandulela-The Dawn, the story of an old person
on the day of our first National Election on 27 April 1994.
The theatre experience adds value and understanding by visitors
of local customs, aspirations and challenges. Whilst providing
an income to sustain the project.
Economic Responsibiliy.
1. To share the benefits we derive from selling and conducting
tours within communities by engaging in the following…
• Make a monetary contribution to all projects visited-
from the tour price.
• Include in our tours, service providers at which our
tour groups will spend money- food and beverages, art and
craft, and accommodation.
• Spend a percentage of our income on Student Development-
we take students of Langa High School for excursions to Museums,
tourist sites, the University and other places that is outside
of the environment of Township children.(This is in addition
to those excursions paid for by Volunteers)
• Place Volunteers with local home-stays, who receive
an income from providing meals and accommodation.
Environmental Responsibility
• Regular servicing of all our vehicles- to reduce harmful
emissions.
• All our vehicles are equipped with a refuse bag, for
safe disposal when vehicles are in the wash bay at night.
• Advise and ensure that tourists use designated pathways
in parks and gardens, not to collect seeds and pluck flowers
and shrubs, and not to feed animals.
• To encourage local people to use litter bins, and
to make use of enviro center for free or affordable plants,
shrubs, grass and compost- The Tsoga Enviro Center in Langa.
go
back