
Hi and Guten Tag. My name is Stephan Peter. Do I look like a South African? Certainly not. My plane from Germany arrived 2 months ago in Cape Town. Since August 13th I am on a personal mission in this renewed country. My goal is to get to know the African culture and nature and give my support to this friendly people. How do I do this? I don’t run around in flip-flops taking pictures like crazy. I chose to actually live and work in this country. Not in a shady and dusty factory but in the great wide open of the South African mountains. I chose to work for Educo Africa, learn from them and contribute my work experience from Germany. Why? Because I love to be in the outdoors and to enable young and old to experience the great potential that lies within nature and themselves.
I have worked for Educo Germany for half a year, delivered experiential courses for students at university and organized adventurous class trips with teachers. How great it is to help young people on their way to maturity and older people to discover the child in themselves again. I like the experiential way because it doesn’t give strict orders and punishment. It rather opens up a space for development for example through climbing a rock, solving a set up group-initiative or allowing each person to share their thoughts and feelings with the group.
I think that in a world of bits and pixels, screens and files, digital worlds and shopping it is crucial, to reconnect with the material natural environment again. In a world of fictive friends and heroes we should grasp the greatness of our own lives again. In a society that is impacted by isolation through fences, wires, computers, wealth it is essential to open a space for a togetherness.
A person is a person because of a person. I’ve experienced the truth behind these words over and over again in the Educo Africa courses. People cheering each other on at a rockclimbing site, carrying each others heavy backpacks and sharing deep personal experience and wisdom with the group. People from different religions and racial backrounds celebrating and laughing together, reaching for one goal, being deeply moved by the time in the mountains. I have seen people crying while they shared their personal story with the group for the first time in their life. I have seen people truly happy after struggling their way up a steep slope receiving honest applause on the summit.
It is a very grateful work leaving positive footprints in other people’s lives.
Thanks to all the Educo Africa staff.
Stephan Peter
I have worked for Educo Germany for half a year, delivered experiential courses for students at university and organized adventurous class trips with teachers. How great it is to help young people on their way to maturity and older people to discover the child in themselves again. I like the experiential way because it doesn’t give strict orders and punishment. It rather opens up a space for development for example through climbing a rock, solving a set up group-initiative or allowing each person to share their thoughts and feelings with the group.
I think that in a world of bits and pixels, screens and files, digital worlds and shopping it is crucial, to reconnect with the material natural environment again. In a world of fictive friends and heroes we should grasp the greatness of our own lives again. In a society that is impacted by isolation through fences, wires, computers, wealth it is essential to open a space for a togetherness.
A person is a person because of a person. I’ve experienced the truth behind these words over and over again in the Educo Africa courses. People cheering each other on at a rockclimbing site, carrying each others heavy backpacks and sharing deep personal experience and wisdom with the group. People from different religions and racial backrounds celebrating and laughing together, reaching for one goal, being deeply moved by the time in the mountains. I have seen people crying while they shared their personal story with the group for the first time in their life. I have seen people truly happy after struggling their way up a steep slope receiving honest applause on the summit.
It is a very grateful work leaving positive footprints in other people’s lives.
Thanks to all the Educo Africa staff.
Stephan Peter

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