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Somali Bantu Resources on Children, Youth, and Families
The BRYCS project is
acquiring and centralizing resources on Somali Bantu children, youth,
and families. All of the resources are accompanied by descriptions
from BRYCS, and many include the full text available on the BRYCS
website, www.brycs.org.
In the spring of
2003, the United States opened its doors to the first of 12,000 Somali
Bantu refugees, who have spent most of the past ten years in Kenyan
refugee camps. With the promise of a new life in a new country, the
Bantu are presented with many new, sometimes wonderful, things, up to
now foreign to them. To provide some measure of assistance with the
transition, Bantu over the age of fifteen receive up to eighty hours
of cultural orientation (CO) before leaving Kenya.
According to figures
from the International Organization for Migration (IOM), sixty percent
of the Bantu population is under the age of seventeen, with thirty-one
percent under the age of six. The typical family consists of four to
eight children. In this BRYCS spotlight, we direct you to a number
of
resources that focus on Somali Bantu children, youth, and families.
The International
Organization for Migration conducts cultural orientation for the
Somali Bantu in Kenya. Several IOM staff share their words of wisdom
about CO for youth, and health considerations for infants and young
children, in Somali Bantu Cultural Orientation–Emails from Kenya.,
one of the documents in our current Featured Search. The IOM’s
Somali Bantu Report, reprinted here in full, addresses
schooling, family and case composition, child-rearing practices,
family unity and family relationships, and general information about
the Bantu. A U.S. government report, Background on Potential
Health Problems for Somali Bantu, focuses on the health
problems these new refugees face. These are issues which local
resettlement organizations and health care providers will want to be
aware of.
Who are
the Somali Bantu? is a two page fact
sheet by the Somali Bantu Community Organization (SOBCO) that touches
on family structure, marriage, celebrations, mental health and
communication styles. Check out SOBCO’s website for
current news and events, and learn about the Somali Bantu Children’s
Foundation. The Center for Applied Linguistics publication, The
Somali Bantu: Their History and Culture offers insight into
religion, family life, marriage and children, diet, dress, education,
health care and mental health, language, and literacy.
From Daycare Trust in
London, Reaching First Base:
Guidelines of Good Practice on Meeting the Needs of Refugee Children
from the Horn of Africa
provides guidance to policy makers and service providers identifying
best practices for daycare, nursery education, health services,
schooling, and out-of-school care for a population with needs that
apply to the Somali Bantu.
Although other
publications featured in this collection of the BRYCS Clearinghouse
address the Bantu in other parts of Africa, they include information
useful for dealing with parenting styles cross-culturally. More
information is offered about Bantu marriage and the birth of the first
child, which may be of use to child
welfare or resettlement workers trying to sort out issues surrounding
the family among Bantu-speaking refugees from Africa.
Read about
last month's
featured program, Parent School
Connection, a program of Somali Community Services of Seattle (SCSS),
which seeks to provide an effective, culturally appropriate means of
interaction among Somali parents, students, and the school system.
BRYCS will continue
to update the
Featured Search on the Somali Bantu as new materials are
acquired, reviewed, and included. Please join us in making this
possible by suggesting relevant resources. Click on the “Suggest a
Resource” link on the BRYCS homepage, or call toll-free
1-888-572-6500—press #3 after the prompt. Or send an e-mail to
Outreach & Information Coordinator Charles Evans at
info at brycs.org.
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