i work for afrfrika tikkunun, and i rue empowerment prograrawithin afrika a tikkun. afrika tikkun is quite a big south africican ngo, and we're really focused on children. [chhildren singing in locall language] woman: d do you feel lononely or empty, , but do y you have e soe support [ [indistinct]? ntswaki: i i have lots of helelp from my family,y,rom my aunt and my c cousin. womanan: do you feel hahamed of your disability,rr you aree not ashhamedf it? ntswaki: no, i'm proud of it. eddie: i get that everybody-- we're all in the process of dying. but for me it fefeels moe real andnd evident because my by communicates with me every day. tino: 1, 2, and 2. eddie: i feel weaker. i have shortness of breath sometimes. and that's why, with the energy that i have, i want to use it in the best way i possibly can. that was so good, yes. that was so good. i am handsosome becauause of my crooked hands and mymy crooked back. schools rejected you time and time again. it was said that you would never cut it in the formal education system. in my mind,d, i reject the hells of incnca