#NEWPROJECT #NEXTGENMEN KICK OFF!

Our new project has kicked off with a BANG! Project #NextGenMen is using the power of soccer to deliver workshops to shift attitudes around traditional gender norms to improve relationship health and ultimately reduce harmful behaviours towards women. We are currently working with 100+ men across 6 sites in Khayelitsha.

Big ups to the Danish, Irish and New Zealand Embassies for supporting us in this valuable work!

Lana Rolfe
Naspers for Good help SOHK fight Period Poverty.

Listening to girls and young women in the SOHK programme, it’s impossible to ignore that many miss school and stay at home because of menstruation. We recognise that a culture of silence around menstruation limits the ability of women and girls to equally participate in society. It undermines their social status and self-esteem. We want to give women the right to go to school, play sport, go to work and participate in life despite not being able to afford sanitary products.

To meet this need SOHK provided, with funding from Naspers for Good, a free-to-user sanitary pad vending machine provided by the amazing social business Menstruation Foundation. In all we have been able to donate 2000 sanitary pads to students at Harold Cressy High school, and in 2022 we hope to increase our provision to 2 new schools.

Scott Sloan
Women in Sport series: Meet Zanele Mdodana

SOHK are dedicated to using sport as a means to replace negative gender norms with more positive and progressive beliefs about women and gender relations.

In 2022 we are continuing to share sporting stories of how SA's top female athletes have overcome the prevailing power imbalance between men and women to excel in their sport. We hope this will inspire young women to persevere at the sport they love and educate us all on how to become their best allies.

Here we chat to Zanele Mdodana, former Captain of South African’s Netball team.

Scott Sloan
New for 2022 - Project NextGenMen

SOHK recognise the urgent need to address a pandemic of violence against women (VAW) in South Africa. We believe that working with men and adolescents is a critical part of violence prevention as men are the primary perpetrators of VAW, and that SOHK and Fives are in a unique position to pioneer an approach that involves challenging traditional notions of masculinity through sport.

#NextGenMen’s first adult pilot project was delivered in 2021 where we achieved the following results:

  • 44% showed a change in attitude supportive of diversity.

  • 33% showed a change in attitude supportive of consent.

  • 22% showed a change in attitude supportive of men’s ability to do care work

  • 25% showed increased knowledge of laws in South africa making VAW ILLEGAL.

Scott Sloan