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Happi Vorster

“Hope for me is slowly drowning and someone giving me an oxygen mask while I learn to swim. It doesn’t matter if I sink because I still have the mask and I can just push myself from the bottom of the ocean back up again. Over and over again, until I get the strokes right. Empathy for me is when I’m in the bottom of a dark well and not only do you see me down there, but put a ladder down for me to climb up, or you even come down to fetch me. Hope has kept me alive and empathy has made me feel alive. Hope has given me the fuel to want to get better mentally and empathy has given me the vehicle to be mentally healthy.”

Happi Vorster  shared their story as part of the Empathy and Hope Project, an immersive art exhibition on the impact of our social environments on the health of our minds. Chapter 2 of this traveling exhibition will be hosted in Durban, South Africa from 12 March – 03 May 2020, featuring photographic art works by Thabiso Sekgala, Lindokuhle Sobekwa, Witness Change & a Refugee Centre in Durban. More details and updates are available on the facebook page: www.facebook.com/empathyhopeproject/