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These are just some of those who have sought our help across Africa.
Jose Returns Home May 2012
Shack Fire 29th May 2012
Natal Witness July 2010
Top Billing end 2008
Cape Times Sept 2010 - Bongani
Northcliff Melville Times - Looking after burn survivors
Citizen - Only useable donations
Firechildren Oct 16 2009
Burn survivors
Swiss surgeons mentioned in Ficksburg newspaper
Swiss surgeons Presentation (Orthopedic update 15.6.2006 - 35MB)
Swiss surgeons Presentation (Sudafrika1 - 51MB)
Beeld 20th April 2009: Sunday and Tavonga in Cape Town for keloid removal
Media Links
JAN 2016
http://www.thanetgazette.co.uk/New-Year-s-Honours-awarded-Thanet/story-28441854-detail/story.html
http://www.harrowtimes.co.uk/news/14183152.Harrow_charity_worker_who_helps_young_burns_survivors_in_Africa_recognised_with_New_Year_Honour/
http://www.pinnerlocal.co.uk/Article.aspx?ArticleId=1881
Dec 2015
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/12/30/new-years-honours-2015-stories-you-wont-have-heard_n_8895350.html?1451514073&utm_hp_ref=uk
Mel in the news: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVGtZzns-Uw
Loide in the news: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXt1n8Nv4bM
Nov 2015
http://www.sevenoakschronicle.co.uk/Burns-survivors-visit-station-school-raise/story-28155979-detail/story.html
Sept 2015
http://www.camdennewjournal.com/burns-victim-perlucia-braves-surgery
http://www.camdennewjournal.com/miles-change-lives-children-fire
Aug 2015
http://www.camdennewjournal.com/firechildren
2014
Happy children singing VIDEO http://youtu.be/qe9At1kWh08
AUG 2014
http://www.camdennewjournal.com/step-way-help-feleng
NOV 2013
http://www.harrowtimes.co.uk/news/10797763.Woman_to_travel_to_Africa_to_help_severely_burnt_children/
JUNE 2012
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/12/isabella-kruger-south-african-burn-cloned-skin-grafts_n_1590164.html
More Links:
Fire & Rescue International April 2013
Sesio in Beeld 25 Nov 2010
The Gift of Giving Dec 2010
Jose's story in the Fourways Review in October 2010
Pretoria News Seiso 6 April 2010
Pretoria News Firechildren Sept 23 2009
Records presentation (as shown in Lagos by researcher Marietta)
Afrikaans News Section
Bart Smit
On 7th September 2011 the story of Bart Smit, a Dutch volunteer helping at Children of Fire and at its sister charity the school, was published in a newspaper called De Sallander/De Veenstreek. Some 33 thousand copies of the free newspaper are distributed in the towns of Hardenberg, Langeveen, Aadorp, Den Ham and the small villages in between, in the Netherlands.
Click to view news article




Safety Play season begins in Alexandra before Winter fires are a fearsome reality
Actors: Mortain Dube, Mitta Lebaka, Michael Wessels, Amanda Simanga, Sicelo Maduna, Londeka Ngidi, Abegail Ximba, Thulani Nhleko, all UMashesha volunteers from Children of Fire, performed a safety play in Alexandra Township on Monday 21st February 2011 at the Ithute Primary School. More plays were scheduled to follow in coming weeks.
The main theme of the play was about the dangers of falling candles and all that that can entail if a safe holder is not used.
All the more poignant was the fact that Sicelo Maduna (12) is the survivor of a blaze caused by a falling candle. He was badly burned at the age on one month old, but survived against the odds, despite losing an arm and the use of an eye.
Three other burns survivors were in the cast - Amanda survived an arson attack, Thulani survived a veldt fire, and Londeka survived hot liquid burns.
Londeka Ngidi said: "Some of us cannot remember when we were injured, because we were too young when it happened. But none of us forget how getting burned changes your life forever. We would do anything to save other children from the pain of the injury, and from the teasing that goes with scars."


On Saturday 5th February 2011, volunteers Katarzyna Pawelczyk, Mitta Lebaka, Thulani Nhleko and Feleng Mahamotse shared toys with all the children in the paediatric ward at Odi Hospital near Pretoria. Odi was the hospital where one of our younger burns survivors Seiso was admitted several years previously. Thanks to our kind donors for the toys.

Vusi Shabalala, the fire fighter, sits at the head of the table as all the teenage burns survivors who climbed Mt Cameroon in January 2011, enjoyed a delicious celebratory meal at moyo Zoo Lake in Johannesburg. They toasted the health of Christian Tchintcha, their Cameroonian colleague, who could not be with them.





After five hours in Home Affairs trying to sort documentation for some of our kids, then Children of Fire UMashesha (quick mover volunteer) Michael Wessels set off to acquire the food for Kya Sands fire survivors (60 families) and to deliver it, working well into the night.
The help of Pick n Pay and other donors is appreciated.
The recipients of the food were very happy to be helped.
Small article from AutoDealer
Jose article 12th August 2010
Saab visits Children of Fire 12th Feb 2010
Miriam Duvell Zetterlind accepted a tactile checkers game made in Swedish colours from Feleng Mahamotse (8), as Children of Fire's gift to Saab. Each square was outlined in wool so that a blind child can play the game as well. In the background Sicelo, Sizwe and Nhlanhla.
Sitting by the sandpit with Saab's engineer Nico and Human Resources manager Brenda Talazo: Doreen, Dorah, Obvious, Sandiso, Obvious, Mabontle, Make, Boipelo, Nkululeko, Thapelo, and one child exiting right!
Brenda Talazo with Nkululeko (9), Sicelo (11) and Sizwe (9) with thank you paintings by the children.



Emmarentia outing



pizza in October at 58

Swiss Ambassador visits Children of Fire October 2009


From an article originally published in ESSA (Emergency Services
South Africa)
She's the unofficial patron saint of burn victims in South Africa and
she's no stranger to controversy. Bronwen Jones is prepared to fight fire with
fire to save lives. Trish Beaver discovers more about this unorthodox
firebrand.
The problem with Bronwen is that she doesn't know the meaning of the
word "NO". So when she encounters an obstacle she simply finds a way around it,
over it, or she chips away at it until it disintegrates.
This can be a bit
frightening for those who encounter her for the first time. It can be a bit
like meeting a bulldozer face to face in a one way street. But there is another
side to Bronwen Jones.
She has a heart that is full to overflowing and a
quirky smile and laugh that brightens a room. Her silky English rose complexion
that makes you wonder why on earth she is here in the heat of Africa fighting
proverbial veld fires.
Perhaps it's a question she herself doesn't quite
know the answer to. Her life is like a runaway veld fire, one day it ignited
and swept her away in this direction.
Dressed as always in casual jeans,
her hair in a ponytail or in plaits, Bronwen looks far younger than she is.
In her 40-odd years, she has done many things before settling on her latest
passion as a fire fighter with a difference.
She has edited newspapers,
taught English to the Turkish military, worked at a pub, walked the streets
wearing billboards advertising an antique market while she was living in
St-Nicholas-on-Wade in Kent, England, and she even wrote a book on the famous
underground tunnel linking Britain and France. She is actually a qualified
engineering geologist.
Her habit of breaking the rules reared its head at
an early age when she decided to overcome the school rule that said that you
had to be 11 to join the school orchestra.
Proficient at playing the piano,
viola and harp, a frustrated Bronwen decided that at 10 she would start her own
orchestra
and she did.
She took baby foxes to school in her blazer
pocket and taught them how to eat eels from a bowl and strawberries out of
season.
Bronwen said: "My mother gave us a choice we could help in the
house or in the garden and I much preferred the garden, which explains why I
can barely cook an egg today but I can use a hammer and nails."
She came to
South Africa 11 years ago, with her ex-husband Peter, expecting to stay for a
few years.
Bronwen was aware of South Africa's bizarre apartheid politics
and she expected the newly "liberated" country to be challenging. But never did
she imagine that she would be challenged at every turn and that her life would
be turned upside down as she as became an activist for fire victims.
She
has had death threats, she has single-handedly waged war against city councils.
She has marched into squatter camps in the dead of night with bags of clothes
and food for the needy after fire has ravaged razed their shacks to the
ground.
In response she has demanded fire and first aid training for
communities and every morning she wakes up with an endless "to do" list.
When her ex-husband complained that she was taking their son Tristan (11) to
dangerous places, she simply bought the boy a bullet-proof vest. She believes
that the squatter communities respect the work she is doing and that she has to
outsmart the thugs.
"Ordinary people in squatter camps live with
intimidation every day. When they have a blanket stolen they have to report it
to the police who hardly take it seriously.
"But to them it's is as
serious as me having my car stolen. They will be cold all night. I believe in
people fighting for their rights and being treated with dignity."
It's not
surprising that her family has a history of political involvement in the
British political system.
Bronwen describes herself as a "humanist".
"Basically I hate to see people with education taking advantage of those who
have none."
She thrives on adrenaline and a wry sense of humour, being
bossy is part of her modus operandi, but it's her ability to roll with the
punches that that keeps her going when the times get tough.
In 1995 an
article about a baby who had been badly burned in a shack fire caught her eye.
She went to visit the baby and she met infant Dorah Mokoena. Doctors
were astounded that she had survived the fire and was continuing to cling
tenaciously to life. Dorah survived - probably thanks to Bronwen.
She
managed to raise funds to get Dorah some reconstructive surgery. She now has
lips, a prosthetic nose and a device she uses to hold things. She has partial
vision but battles to communicate because her lips and tongue are affected.
Today, Dorah lives with Bronwen and Tristan. She is the reason that
Bronwen became immersed in the world of fire.
She was appalled at the lack
of facilities for burn victims and the lack of fire education among poor
communities.
"Having newspaper connections in Britain I believed I could
raise funds from overseas to help badly burned children get the surgical help
they needed to improve their quality of life."
She set up the Children of
Fire charity, which raises funds for badly burned children and then she began
educating communities.
South Africa's informal communities are the most
vulnerable where fire and injury is concerned. She said: "One fire can spread
rapidly in a squatter camp due to the close proximity of the shacks and the
lack of available water.
"You soon learn that contributing factors are
things like alcohol abuse - as many as one third of fire related injuries are
intentional in South Africa." she explained.
Fire can happen anytime among
the poor who rely on candles, paraffin for heat and light. All it takes is a
candle to fall over and a blaze begins, spreading like a ravenous monster
eating everything in its path.
"In many cases, it's the children who die,
locked inside, unable to get out. The emergency services get there too
late."
Bronwen believes that the survivors are often worse off because
their injuries leave them sentenced to a life-time of prejudice.
"Victims
are left horribly scarred and we live in a society where physical beauty is
prized above anything else."
Her most recent success has been the
initiation of Umashesha "the Quick Movers", a project initiated in
Johannesburg's Alexandra township to train volunteers in first aid and fire
fighting.
They have been identified as youth leaders and they undergo
training with St John's Ambulance and Children of Fire. After training they are
identified as "Umashesha" and are given stickers to stick on the doors of their
homes and bright red t-shirts which identify them among the community.
In
any emergency the community know they can come to these people for assistance.
The volunteers also act as a watchdog body looking for potential situations
that could cause danger. Once they discovered a few illegal electricity
connections, which they reported to the Johannesburg Electricity Department.
These illegal connections are extremely dangerous. The volunteers also
discovered that a fire extinguisher vandalised by scrap metal thieves had been
the main reason a fire had spread causing 56 shacks to burn.
The volunteers
recently focused on organising talks at Alexandra schools to make children more
safety conscious in relation to fire.
Bronwen is constantly canvassing
companies looking for sponsorship for specially designed water tanks to install
in squatter communities.
Even in these instances she has to be creative
and forward thinking. With water in such scarce supply, squatters may be
tempted to raid the tanks for domestic water purposes, so plans were discussed
to dye the water and treat it with something that tasted horrible.
Bronwen
is a realist when it comes to human nature.
"I started learning about the
dangers of fire and that was the beginning, I have learnt about people,
cultures, communities, politics and all kinds of things I never imagined."
She is eventually hoping that the Government will realise that her fire
prevention measures can save lives and money in the long term and they will
fund her education campaigns.
But her association with the Government has
not always been smooth. Once, in typical Bronwen style she did battle with
South Africa's Department of Home Affairs.
Her residence permit had not
been approved and they had revoked her ex-husband's work permit. She faced the
prospect of having to return to Britain.
Bronwen donned her traditional
Zulu outfit, booked plane tickets for herself and young Tristan and sat in the
office of Zulu traditionalist Mangosuthu Buthelezi's who is minister of that
portfolio, causing a minor riot as she handed out posters of burn victims and
lectured the young secretaries until finally Water and Forestry Minister Ronnie
Kasrils passed by, coming to her rescue.
She recalls: "Buthelezi's
flustered secretary told me I didn't have an appointment, and I told her that I
had phoned her to say I was coming which was as good as an appointment."
Bronwen has no regrets. She says flippantly: "If I meet a tall handsome rich
plastic surgeon who can fix up all my burns cases and take me out to dinner
then I'll be very happy won't I." Her organisation can be found on the web -
www.icon.co.za/~firechildren.