Neftaly Email: sayprobiz@gmail.com Call/WhatsApp: + 27 84 313 7407

Tag: platform

Neftaly is a Global Solutions Provider working with Individuals, Governments, Corporate Businesses, Municipalities, International Institutions. Neftaly works across various Industries, Sectors providing wide range of solutions.

Neftaly Email: sayprobiz@gmail.com Call/WhatsApp: + 27 84 313 7407

  • Neftaly Promoting sports as a platform for national reconciliation and healing

    Neftaly Promoting sports as a platform for national reconciliation and healing

    Neftaly: Harnessing the Power of Sports for National Reconciliation and Healing

    At Neftaly, we believe sports have a unique ability to bring people together, transcend divisions, and foster healing in societies recovering from conflict or social fragmentation. Our initiatives focus on promoting sports as a powerful platform for national reconciliation and healing, helping communities rebuild trust and unity through shared experiences.

    Why Sports for Reconciliation?

    Sports provide a neutral ground where individuals from different backgrounds can engage in teamwork, dialogue, and mutual respect. These interactions create opportunities to break down prejudices, address grievances, and nurture a collective identity rooted in peace.

    Our Initiatives

    • Organizing mixed-community sports events that encourage cooperation and friendship
    • Facilitating dialogue sessions alongside competitions to address social issues and promote understanding
    • Training coaches and leaders in peacebuilding through sports
    • Creating awareness campaigns that highlight stories of reconciliation and hope

    Impact and Vision

    Neftaly’s programs aim to:

    • Foster social cohesion and national unity
    • Support trauma healing and emotional resilience through sport
    • Empower youth as agents of peace and change
    • Build inclusive communities where diversity is celebrated

    Get Involved

    Join Neftaly in using sports as a bridge to heal divisions and build a stronger, more united nation. Together, we can transform fields and courts into arenas of peace and solidarity.


    Play Together. Heal Together. Unite Together.
    Support Neftaly’s mission to promote sports as a catalyst for national reconciliation and healing.

  • Neftaly Highlighting sports as a platform for peacebuilding in schools

    Neftaly Highlighting sports as a platform for peacebuilding in schools

    Neftaly: Sports for Peace and Belonging

    Framing sports in schools as a transformative platform for peacebuilding and identity cohesion


    ???? 1) Why now? — The need for peacebuilding through sport in schools

    • In countries like post‑apartheid South Africa, students often live and learn in racially, economically, and residentially segregated neighborhoods. This “apartheid vestige” often re-emerges within schools, feeding inter-group distrust and inequality.
    • Sport offers a powerful, neutral “third space” where children can interact across these boundaries to prevent division in early adolescence (aged ~10–14) before stereotypes harden sportanddev.
    • Beyond South Africa, contexts from Malaysia to Lebanon show how sports can reduce violent‑extremism risk by building resilience, empathy, and inclusion among youth UNDP.

    Neftaly’s vision: Use school‑based sports to overcome historic tensions, promote belonging, and develop the next generation of peacebuilders in education.


    ⚽ 2) How it works — Program structure and curriculum

    ComponentSummary
    Mixed‑Team ClubsBoys and girls from different ethnic, national and class backgrounds are grouped into year‑round mixed school teams that play together in “Peace League” matches.
    Peace & Identity CurriculumSessions on conflict resolution, self‑esteem, stereotype awareness, gender equity, and identity storytelling are embedded within training.
    Leadership PipelineOlder participants train as peer‑coaches and mediators, gaining certification to mentor in their schools and communities.
    Festival TournamentsHalf‑yearly City‑Wide Peace Festivals bring teams across schools for experiential mingling, team‑building games, and structured workshops.
    Safe‑Space Coach TrainingCoaches from each school receive guidance on trauma‑informed facilitation, diversity, and gender inclusion.

    This structure mirrors PeacePlayers South Africa, which trained local coaches and hosted inter‐community basketball teams, emphasizing that children who play together learn to live together ConnexUs.


    ???? 3) Peacebuilding via story & sport — curriculum highlights

    • Identity mapping exercises: Youth create visual maps of their cultural and family identity to promote empathy across differences.
    • Conflict role‑plays: Using common school scenarios, facilitated sessions teach non‑violent resolution and perspective‑taking.
    • Inter‑school storytelling pairs: Participants from different schools interview each other and present partner’s stories to the group.
    • Team‑based challenges: Tasks rotate roles so children learn cooperation, communication, integrity, and fairness—values reinforced in debriefs.

    ???? 4) Measuring success — Kirkpatrick‑style evaluation metrics

    Neftaly recommends a mixed quantitative & qualitative evaluation inspired by PPI’s evaluation in Durban:

    • Attitudinal change: Pre‑ and post‑participation surveys track implicit bias and stereotype indices. PeacePlayers evaluation showed statistically significant declines in racial stereotyping among participants vs control groups ConnexUs.
    • Social bridging: Friendship logs and interviews about cross‑community friendships—PeacePlayers South Africa reported nearly 100 % of youth made a friend from a different community peaceplayers.org.
    • Leadership confidence: Self‑reported leadership confidence rises upward of 90 % among leadership-track youth in PPI projects.
    • Retention pipeline: Tracking how many older youth become certified coaches or program alumni provides sustainability data.

    ???? 5) Expected outcomes

    GoalImpact
    Reduced in‑school tensionsStudents report fewer racial/gender/class-based conflicts. Evaluations from PPI show a clear reduction in self-reported racism.
    Enhanced values integrationPeer-matches and tournaments reinforce shared values → increased empathy, trust, tolerance.
    Youth as peace advocatesOlder students rise into leadership and coach roles, sustaining cross-school clubs and peace education peer groups.
    School‑wide culture shiftParticipating schools adopt co‑curricular peace clubs, aligning with wellness and inclusive education policies.

    ???? 6) Scaling & adaptability

    • Modular design allows replication in different regions, languages, and sports (e.g. futsal, netball, rugby 7s).
    • Resource toolkit supports scaling: lessons, coach training guides, multilingual curriculum, baseline evaluation tools.
    • Partnership readiness: Libraries, after‑school programmes, and local sports councils can support the peace festivals and tournaments.
    • Longitudinal tracking of alumni pathways helps demonstrate transformation over time—ranging from community engagement to tertiary education uptake.

    ✏️ 7) Sample elevator pitch

    “Neftaly equips schools to tap into the universal power of sport to bring together diverse youth teams, equip them with peace‑skills and stories of identity, and build a pipeline of school‑based peacebuilders. Together, schools shift from silent segregation to active inclusion—breaking old divides while helping students become empathetic leaders in their communities.”


    Key references

    • Sport & Development’s Peacebuilding review: sport reduces stereotypes and builds cross-community rapport in schools and communities (South Africa example) sportanddev
    • PeacePlayers South Africa: over 20 years, 10 000+ youth in 59 schools; 34 courts built; 400+ youth coaches trained—all women and men from same communities now influencing peers, changing perceptions and bridging gaps peaceplayers.org
    • PPI evaluation (ConnexUs report, 2022): youth report increased leadership, belonging, and cross-group friendships, and sport strongly attracts participation while enabling soft‑skill growth ConnexUs
    • UNDP Malaysia’s “SERASI” sports workshop: youth engaged in sports and dialogue showed increased resilience and inclusion, preventing narratives of extremism and bigotry UNDP