Philippi Village is a community development hub in Cape Town.

According to the hub, the partnership was solidified during the fellowship's trailblazing tour of Philippi Village in March, which brought together music, art and drama to explore critical issues surrounding community safety. 

As a transformative platform for formerly incarcerated leaders from around the world, the GFF aims to:
  • nurture changemakers
  • build transnational solidarity
  • foster a shared sense of struggle and success
  • combat stigma against people who have been in prison, and
  • instigate innovative justice work worldwide. 

The partnership between Philippi Village and the GFF marks a significant step forward in promoting positive change in South Africa and beyond. By bringing together some of the most visionary minds in the fields of criminal justice and community development, this tour sparked vital discussions, ignited creative solutions and instilled hope for a more equitable and just society, according to the duo.

The aim of the partnership is to elevate the message of building safer communities in South Africa and to change the narrative on how safety is talked about.

By leveraging the power of music, art and drama, the event challenged traditional approaches to community safety and laid the groundwork for a new era of collaborative and innovative safety and security work, the duo adds.

During the tour, the fellows collaborated with artists and entrepreneurs at Philippi Village and highlighted their journey and stories. They also participated in painting a mural and recording a podcast on what safety means to them. In addition, they recorded a song that is now the GFF global anthem, completed in three languages. 

"We wanted to do more than visit Philippi Village. They are a community development hub and the perfect partner because together we can build safer communities that benefit all of South Africa. It starts by learning about lived experiences by previously incarcerated leaders," says Dr Baz Dreisinger, founder of the GFF. 

The discussions culminated in the painting of the mural to celebrate the process.  It was done by Cape Town-based graffiti artist Skubalisto, who has been involved in multiple public art projects at Philippi Village.

"The objective of the mural was to have a permanent presence in a physical way, depicting a child in the arms of a parent to represent safety. Art is central to healing, and the GFF believes that art transcends barriers, including language barriers, and can be used to bond people across borders," says Dreisinger.

"It is a universal language that everyone can understand. It's powerful because the people involved are't claiming to be community safety experts but are using art to translate what safety means to them into something visual," adds Dreisinger. 

"Philippi Village has done a great job recognising the need to use an integrated approach to safety. They recognise that building safe communities is essential for their project to work. They have reached out to various projects, programmes and agencies to help them explore how to do this. One of the ways has been through the Global Freedom Fellows partnership," Dreisinger says.

The duo says that the fellowship happens annually and, going forward, one fellow will be selected every year to be a Philippi Village visionary. This person will be housed at Philippi Village and spend a year exploring different elements of building a safer community. The GFF will also have international residents coming every year to work in collaboration with Philippi Village. 

The GFF's main programme is the Incarceration Nations Network (INN), which supports, instigates and popularises innovative prison reform and justice reimagining efforts around the world.

INN is a partner-led organisation that is:
  • globally minded but locally grounded
  • attuned to problems but driven by solutions
  • focused on systemic change, and
  • committed to transnational solidarity and intersectionality.

The GFF and Philippi Village say that investing in communities and trusting leaders who have lived experiences are key to building safer communities.

"We know that the success of Philippi Village is directly connected to the safety of the community we operate within," says Bushra Razack, CEO of Philippi Village.

"Philippi Village is excited to be working alongside the GFF to explore ways to better understand our role and what we can do to improve the social, cultural, economic and political conditions that give rise to risk in the community. We are learning from so many partners and agencies who do this better than we do," adds Razack.

"We are working with them to understand how to co-create a safe and inspiring community space that strengthens social cohesion and enhances the connections between people, the places they share and the potential opportunities that exist through collaborative processes that identify shared value," Razack says. 

"The success will depend on if there are locally owned solutions committed to by the community and users of our space. The journey is an ongoing one," concludes Razack. 

For more information, visit www.philippivillage.co.za. You can also follow Philippi Village on Facebook, Twitter or on Instagram.