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Waves for Change: Surfing towards a better future

Waves For Change
Surfing towards a better future
Apish Tshetsha is driving his lime green van with surf board attached to the roof, weaving his way down the main street in the Masiphumelele (Masi) township in central Cape Town. It’s Freedom Day, celebrations are taking place and the community is a hive of activity.
The softly spoken 26-year-old comes to life as he drives through the community, his van stopping every five or so meters as a young member of the community greets Apish. ‘Awe!’ he shouts to his friends and community members.
After minutes in his company, you sense that to Apish, sport is life. He waxes lyrical about the soccer teams he supports and his Springbok heroes, but much of his time is taken up by his newfound love of surfing.
“It feels like you could stay there for the rest of your life. Like you could never get hungry, it’s an amazing feeling.”
Three years ago, Apish couldn’t swim. “I can do a few lengths of the pool now,” he laughs. Through the Laureus YES (Youth Empowerment through Sport) programme, Apish was introduced to an award winning social entrepreneur called Tim Conibear, who was trialling a programme called Waves for Change, using the sport of surfing to help stabilise young people affected by emotional and psychological trauma.
Tim said: “Apish had a pretty tricky childhood, growing up pretty much alone. He is fiercely independent but also quite a vulnerable soul and when I met him he had been unemployed for quite a long time. He loved his sport but he didn’t have many formal skills to work with. He’s done brilliantly, he’s now a trained youth care worker.”
Tim introduced Apish to surfing and the 24-year-old has not looked back since. He completed his youth care worker training and progressed through the Laureus YES programme, learning a variety of life and social skills along the way, as well as developing his confidence as a public speaker.
“The YES programme came at the right time for me,” Apish reflects. “When you’re a young person and you’re a bit confused about your future, YES really changes your life. We were taught everything there; health lifestyle, sexual lifestyle, goal setting and also the generous things you can do in your community to influence change. You have to live by the norms of the township”
Drugs, peer pressure, gangs and staying away from the wrong crowds. Apish highlights the struggles he faced as a youngster.
“It’s tough because of the things that go on, the challenges of society; you have to live by the norms of the township where there are drugs, alcohol, teenage pregnancy and gangs. Peer pressure is tough but luckily I’ve never been involved in those things, I’ve always tried to keep myself busy with sport.”
Apish used his hard work on the soccer field to keep a focus in his life and help himself concentrate on his studies, keeping himself away from falling into the wrong crowds.
“I would spend my whole day playing sport and at night I would be with the books studying, so sport and education have made me who I am, even in my values as well. You don’t want to disappoint your elders, your family and to the young people as well because role models are so, so rare in the township, especially for young people.
“When you’re old at least you can be influenced by media and role models on TV or in magazines but when you’re young you want to play and explore and you’re faced with choices.”
To say the 24-year-old is a role model would be an understatement. Apish has introduced the sport of surfing to the soccer-loving youngsters living in Masi. Through the Waves for Change programme, surfing is a sport of the community today.
“Maybe in 10 years, they’ll look back and say ‘Thank you Apish’”
“It feels great to mentor other people, knowing that you make a difference,” he proudly states “With young people who are still stumbling, they maybe cannot see now what impact Waves for Change has for them, in a couple of years to come they might be grateful that they were part of Waves for Change. Maybe in 10 years, they’ll look back and say ‘Thank you Apish!’”
The Laureus YES programme empowers young people from community sports organisations to become the future leaders of the sport for good movement. Through the YES programme, young people are given the information and tools to take back to their communities and pass on.
“Please, hold on to Madiba’s legacy” - Apish Tshetsha
Judging by the youngsters of Masi, many of them are already thanking Apish Tshetsha. Through sport, Apish was given a chance and an opportunity to pave his own path, one which he grabbed with both hands. When asked if he has one message for the youngsters in his community and other communities around the world, Apish doesn’t hesitate.
“I would say if I had one thing to tell young people it would be, please, hold on to Madiba’s legacy. What Laureus is doing now is the true definition of what Mandela meant when he said: ‘Nothing is impossible.’”
A visit from a surfing surperstar
Laureus Ambassador and world leading big-wave surfer Sebastian Steudtner paid an impromptu visit to meet Apish and the Waves for Change youngsters, and was blown away by the activities which were taking place.
“That time when they’re on the surfboard, they’re so free, there are no worries in their eyes, it’s just pure fun and pure happiness to be in that moment,” he said. “To create an environment for them like that is so valuable, and I truly believe that it changes those kids and helps them to better their lives.”
“For me, these are the real heroes of sport, the real role models, the ones who change something.”
Created by the pioneering Isiqalo Foundation, the only organisation in the world looking to harness the power of surfing to address the issue of HIV awareness, Waves for Change is based in the informal settlement of Masiphumelele in Cape Town. The project aims to encourage young people to know their HIV status and to produce community peer leaders that will encourage a responsible and informed approach to the issues surrounding the spread of the virus. 

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