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Monday, 25 May 2026

HOPE FOR SEDIBENG: LESEDI COMMUNITY CENTRE EXPANDS SKILLS WAR CHEST AS PROVINCIAL FUNDING RENEWED

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HOPE FOR SEDIBENG: LESEDI COMMUNITY CENTRE EXPANDS SKILLS WAR CHEST AS PROVINCIAL FUNDING RENEWED


BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA 

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​HEIDELBERG — The Lesedi Community Centre (LCC), a pillar of grassroots empowerment based in the Sedibeng district, is set to drastically expand its socio-economic upliftment programmes after securing a crucial funding renewal from the Gauteng Department of Social Development.

​Established in 2013, the Heidelberg-based non-profit organisation has spent over a decade fighting poverty and systemic hardship along the margins of Gauteng. The fresh influx of provincial treasury backing will directly finance a rapid expansion of LCC’s local skills development, social enterprise initiatives, and vulnerable wellness operations.

A Strategic Lifeline for the Forgotten

​According to LCC General Manager Jaco Kritzinger, the center’s foundational mandate is to systematically equip marginalized individuals with the physical and psychological tools required to achieve financial independence.

"Our aim is to make Lesedi Community Centre an inspiration of hope by providing youth and community members with opportunities and skills to realise their full potential and purpose," Kritzinger stated following the funding announcement. "We want to ensure they are fully empowered to make a tangible difference in their own lives and within their broader communities."

​The rapidly growing non-profit prioritizes high-risk and historically neglected demographics, targeting:

​Unemployed and un-schooled youth


​Vulnerable and displaced women from highly disadvantaged townships, such as neighboring Ratanda

​From Immediate Crisis Relief to Long-Term Autonomy

​LCC operates a highly integrated social safety net that transitions individuals from emergency crisis management to long-term career placement.

​The organization runs a massive, short-term protective shelter for abused women and children, boasting a 68-bed capacity. While housed, beneficiaries receive comprehensive clinical rehabilitation, life-skills counseling, and are eventually guided through sensitive family reunification or independent reintegration processes. 

Concurrently, the center manages a localized drop-in hub and an extensive feeding scheme that delivers hot, nutritional meals daily to indigent households.

​However, Kritzinger emphasizes that handouts alone cannot break the cycle of generational poverty. To address this, the center channels significant operational funding into aggressive, practical trade skills:

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