Page 25 - Fiji Traveller Issue 10
P. 25

Reaping  what  is  sown  at St Mina






                           Visit the lobby of the Crowne Plaza Fiji Nadi Bay Resort & Spa on Saturday mornings
                         and  you  will  find  a  table  busy  with  young  people    threading  beads  and  designing
                         bookmarks.
                           The  talented  children  come  from  St  Mina  Children’s  Home,  and  are  working  on
                         jewellery and other small gift items as part of the home’s ‘Sow and Reap’ program.
                           Home Manager Dr Lydia Musa says the program enables residents 14 years and
                         older to “learn new skills, interact with people, understand marketing, entrepreneurship,
                         financial acumen, and earn money as well.”
                           St Mina Children’s Home in Legalega, Nadi has 22 residents aged between four
                         months and 19 years of age. Founded by the Coptic Orthodox Church, it is dedicated
                         to improving the life of Fijian children and realising their full potential.
                           “To build the sustainability of the home is really important, especially when it comes
                         to charity,” Dr Musa says. “We're trying to get rid of this concept of toxic charity, which
                         is where you just give and give and give,  and it doesn't teach anything, or doesn't
                         become self-sustainable.
                           “It's a long journey. It doesn't happen overnight, especially when you're changing
                         ideas and cultures and expectations of people, because everyone thinks with charity,
                         you just donate.
                           “ We teach the kids that actually, I can earn something, I don't need a handout all
                         the time. Because when they do get a handout, this is just actually solidifying what's
                         happened in the past and where they’ve come from, which is often from poverty and
                         from begging. We want to break that cycle, and the only way to break that cycle is to
                         make sure that the charities that we have are also self-sustainable in a way, and that
                         the kids learn and have pride in themselves and their talents.”
                           These  talents  extend  beyond  the  Saturday  morning  sessions.  Children  from  St
                         Mina also enjoy cooking, baking, hair-braiding, tie dye, guitar, singing, screen printing,
                         painting and graphic design.
                           St  Mina  Children’s  Home  has  formed  other  partnerships  with  resorts  and  hotels
                         beyond the Crowne Plaza, including with the Yatule Resort and Spa at Natadola.
                           Visit stminaschildrenshome.org to learn more about their work and how you can
                         assist.








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