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South Sudan: plastic bottle caps open up future for youth

From Villaciambra, Italy, to Juba, South Sudan, a 5,000-kilometre-long journey tells the story of the "Open Caps" project. Tons of bottle caps are collected, sold, and recycled, providing a way to pay for scholarships for young people in South Sudan. The African nation still suffers from various crises, but people are finding hope and a chance in life through education.

By Cecilia Seppia

Officials at Italy’s Ministry for Foreign Affairs had strongly advised them against travelling to South Sudan. Less than 24 hours before the flight the couple received a phone call from the Ministry advising them not to go, saying “it is dangerous, and we cannot guarantee your safety.” But Marta Genova, a journalist, and her husband Antonino Costa, a photographer, cared so much about this beautiful story. And despite the warning, they loaded their suitcases with equipment, passion, and faith, and took their flight to Juba, South Sudan, so they could document and share their story about the "Open Caps" project through their journalistic efforts.

It all began in a small village of just over a thousand people in the province of Palermo, a place called Villaciambra at the Don Bruno di Bella Oratory of the parish of Maria Santissima del Rosario. During Sunday Mass, Marta and Antonino sat in the Church pews and after the blessing, they heard the parish priest speaking about the collection and sale of these plastic bottle caps with a 'miraculous' consideration. They are used to finance charitable initiatives for poor people in difficult circumstances.

This time they have focused their solidarity and given hope to children in a village near the capital of South Sudan, offering them scholarships at the "Secondary School Bro. Augusto Memorial College.” The institution makes up part of a number of projects sponsored by the Italian Bishops’ Conference (CEI) through its Committee and Service for Charitable Action in the Developing World. Projects also include the construction of the nearby Good Shepherd Peace Centre, where Marta and Antonino stayed during their trip, and the Catholic University of South Sudan. "Today there is more need than ever to share good news stories, and this is one! We journalists have a duty to show the world the other side of the coin as well,” exclaims Marta as she explains the whole process that turns bottle caps into money used to educate those where illiteracy is rampant, as it is here.

Some of the recipients of the scholarships funded by the sale of bottle caps
Some of the recipients of the scholarships funded by the sale of bottle caps

Sustainability offers a future

All the families in and around Villaciambra have become zealous 'hoarders' of bottle caps. They put them aside, involve their children, even the youngest, and once they have filled their bags, they take them to the oratory. The collection point for the bottle caps involving churches in the city of Palermo participating in the initiative is the parish of Santa Lucia, thanks to the support of Claudio Parotti, a Comboni brother who lived in Colombia for many years. The caps are taken to storage areas using their own cars and vans to a space made available free of charge by a Villaciambra resident and then emptied into “Big Bags” weighing 160-170 kg each. These huge bags are then taken to an area company that recycles the bottle caps and resells the semi-finished product to other companies that use them to produce pipes, utensils, and household accessories. In previous years, the sale of bottle caps has made it possible to raise fairly large sums of money, which have been allocated to promote charitable and solidarity-based activities. Now this solidarity has reached Juba, South Sudan.

The “Big Bags” of plastic caps weighing 160-170 tons each
The “Big Bags” of plastic caps weighing 160-170 tons each

Education and moving forward

Despite its independence from the north, proclaimed in 2011, South Sudan is still reeling from a civil war, a social, economic and political crisis, and a worsening humanitarian situation. In many areas, there is no access to drinking water or sanitation, while in others there is no electricity. Roadways are bumpy, at times impassable, and rubbish can be found everywhere. Children are forced to work or carry guns instead of going to school and learning how to build their own freedom and future. "Every time something happens in South Sudan, the first to lose out are young people,” Marta Genova recounts. “The government, perpetually at war with the so-called rebels, suspends lessons at every hint of a crisis, blocking educational or training projects, even those set up by the local Church, thereby halting their only chance of moving forward. With Open Caps, a different way has opened up, allowing 15 boys and girls between the ages of 14 and 20 to study and obtain a diploma, a huge step forward, even if it seems like a drop in the ocean.”

Classrooms of Secondary School Bro. Augusto Memorial College in the village of Kit, Juba
Classrooms of Secondary School Bro. Augusto Memorial College in the village of Kit, Juba

Always recount beauty

The journey was a bit of an Odyssey, says Marta, confiding however that she never lost faith, perhaps also thanks to the rosary she held in her hand, asking for the Virgin Mary's intercession and protection. "After contacting the Combonis on site and receiving two rather expensive and beyond our budget plane tickets to Juba from the aid organisation Caramella Smile, made up of doctors and surgeons who work in Africa with a project for diagnosis and treatment of craniofacial malformations, my husband and I set off to tell the story of this five thousand km journey of hope through this photojournalistic project that will soon be made into an exhibit. There were so many difficulties, but obtained a work visa and once there, as we were crossing the bridge over the White Nile, they stopped us, searched our car, and confiscated our equipment and mobile phones.  At one point they even wanted to arrest us, but in the end, thanks to the mediation of Brother Bosco, special secretary of the school in Juba who was travelling with us, and after paying a sum in dollars, we continued, even more convinced that what we had to show the beauty and strength of this project.”

Antonino and Marta's journey through the streets of South Sudan
Antonino and Marta's journey through the streets of South Sudan

Meeting with students

"We met all the students and especially those who had received scholarships. They knew nothing and while we explained what was happening to their lives (through the project), they looked moved and their eyes showed happiness, as they listened to us with amazement. All they knew was that one day Father Mario Pellegrino, a missionary for years in those lands, had taken them off the streets and from the poverty of the villages, but they did not expect that they would be able to also study. They were taken aback and moved to discover that in a faraway city there are people who think about them and want to try to help them. This opened up a broader reflection, also on what they themselves could do one day for their country. Everyone thanked us. One boy in particular had lost his parents, some of his siblings, and yet he was saying all the time how happy he was to be there at school. In a similar situation, in Palermo (but in general also in the other places that adhere to the cap collection project of which there are many in Italy), they do not fully understand the purpose of the initiative, because no one has ever explained it to them. Letting them know how things are going and showing the result of their actions creates a powerful impression on them and leaves a lasting message that can only do good and motivate them to do more. If you know that those bottle caps will help people who have a name, a face, even if they live on another continent, you will set those bottle caps aside with care, you will take time to bring them to the collection centre, and you will become a key part of the project and do it with joy.”

Joy in the faces of the new young students Marta and Antonino met
Joy in the faces of the new young students Marta and Antonino met

Echoes of Laudato si'

Throughout the journey and all the photojournalistic work, but right from Villaciambra, Marta says “I felt the echo of Laudato si' in this initiative. I felt personally called upon to carry out my mission. These bottle caps open up possibilities for people and the environment, with the recovery and recycling of plastic on the one hand, and the opportunity for going forward on the other. 'Open Caps' is an environmental sustainability project that also reminds us of the importance of strengthening ties, connections, because nobody is saved alone and only united can we make a difference. Cap collection is a type of sustainable, eco-social business and therefore goes perfectly in the direction of Laudato si'. The cap as opposed to the bottle can be recycled and reused almost indefinitely to create useful things, from drainpipes to household accessories, and this goes in the opposite direction to the disposable culture and waste that Pope Francis constantly decries.” Looking at the photos taken by Antonino Costa, we also are very moved. "The photos show glances, they show faces,” Marta concludes. There is one I especially wanted to give the title 'Hope'. It portrays a 10-year-old girl, her hands in front of her face almost clasped and her black but bright, luminous eyes that despite all they have seen, are full of hope and faith in life and in adults. That is why we are almost obliged to help these children, precisely because of the trust they express and place in us. It is as if they are shouting: 'you can help me!' We have tried to stop time here - this happy time - and perhaps we have even succeeded. These people are busy all day, they study all the time, except during the lunch break. Their perseverance is praiseworthy, yet they never seem tired, on the contrary, they are hungry for knowledge, full of curiosity and wonder, the same wonder we see in creation when it is not polluted, dirty, or ruined, and when God's gaze shines through it.”

Good Shepherd Peace Centre church in Juba, one of the projects in South Sudan sponsored by the CEI
Good Shepherd Peace Centre church in Juba, one of the projects in South Sudan sponsored by the CEI

Some statistics

The plastic in bottle caps is made from a different material than the rest of the bottle, polyethylene (PE) or high-density polyethylene (HDPE). These are plastics that have a big impact on the environment because they are made using large amounts of oil, water and energy. This is not ideal, but it is still possible to recover something from them and harness the value they have, namely that these plastics can be reused indefinitely. A ton of plastic caps is priced at 150 to 200 euros. According to information cited a few years ago by Italy’s CICAP association, a committee established in 1989 also with the contribution of Italian television presenter Piero Angela, one ton of caps equals around more than 400 thousand plastic caps. The Villaciambra Oratory made over two thousand euros in its most recent collection of bottle caps sold to a recycling company totaling around eleven tons. Two thousand euro in places like South Sudan is a lot of money. There is no national 'price list', companies try to set similar rates that still fluctuate. The Sicilian company, for example, in the first years of the project paid 0.20-0.25 euro per kg for the caps back in 2006-2007, but then the price dropped to a minimum of 0.10 and later rose again in 2018. Now rates are between 15 and 18 cents per kg.

All Villaciambra families participate in the bottle cap collection
All Villaciambra families participate in the bottle cap collection

 

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10 January 2023, 10:55