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This unique project based at Bernex in the Genevan
countryside, aims to promote the independence of the
mentally handicapped by giving them jobs and encouraging
them to live on their own.
The village has been constructed around a farm and
includes 11 residences and four workshops plus a bakery, a
grocery shop and a church. There is even a daily bus.
All the residents, men and women aged between 19 and 82,
have conditions such as autism or Down Syndrome. Most of
them live in the village but several travel in for the
day.
Social workers – 120 in all - are on hand to help them in
their jobs and in their daily lives.
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Serge Bednarczyk, President of the Aigues-Vertes
Foundation (swissinfo) |
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Bread and cakes
The bakery, on the corner of the village square, sells
croissants, bread and cakes, all made by the villagers. It
makes the bread for the village but also takes orders from
outside.
Seven villagers, plus the baker-social worker are at work.
Arnold, who originally comes from the Congo, is
concentrating on making pains au chocolat. He carefully
cuts the dough before adding the little squares of
chocolate.
“What I like doing here is all sorts of bread and
croissants, and also what I’ve learnt is how to do some
types of cakes, Black Forest or some mille feuilles,” he
says cheerfully.
“So if it’s my brother’s birthday, instead of my parents
buying a cake at Migros, I can do it myself as a surprise
for my brother.”
Serge Bednarczyk, Aigues Vertes’s director, is pleased
with the progress that Arnold – who comes in daily – has
made.
“At the beginning he was not able to do anything. Now he
can do everything on his own and this is exactly what we
are looking for - independence,” he said.
Down on the farm
The farm, at the heart of the village, bustles with
activity as its 25 workers go about their allotted tasks.
The farm houses a variety of animals: cows, which are
raised for their meat, donkeys and horses, as well as
ducks and chickens. Vegetables are also grown, although
the village is not yet self-sufficient. All the methods
used are environmentally friendly.
Workers start at nine in the morning and finish at five in
the evening, just like a normal working day. They even
receive a salary – but smaller than average because they
do not produce as much as regular workers.
But Bednarczyk is careful to point out that Aigues Vertes
is not interested in how much they produce but in how they
produce it.
He explains that it usually takes a lot of time to train a
handicapped person for a job and the task is made more
complicated by the fact that they can normally only learn
one thing thoroughly. But sometimes they are surprised at
how well the residents do.
“There is even one handicapped person who is able to drive
a tractor around the farm. This is fantastic because its
not easy for them to drive and when you see him on the
tractor he is very proud, ” Bednarczyk told swissinfo.
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Nicole works on the farm (swissinfo) |
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Independence
The pride that the villagers take in their work is
evident. Nicole looks after the rabbits and the cows at
the farm.
“I love my work at the farm because I love animals and I
wouldn’t like to be sat down all day in a workshop. I
prefer to be outdoors,” she said.
“I am the only woman at the farm but my friends look after
me well, even if some of them say that I am the only woman
and it’s not my work.”
Having her independence is very important to Nicole. Apart
from working on the farm, she also lives in accommodation
with three other handicapped people and is learning to
cook on her own – an important step for her.
“In the evening I do my cooking myself. I’m trying to
follow a diet and I eat lots of vegetables. My favourite
meal is pasta but I’ve stopped eating that because it
makes you get fat,” she explained.
Not everybody is as independent as Nicole. There is also a
workshop which makes candles and paper for those who are
unable to carry out tasks in the farm or in the bakery.
Another workshop specialises in weaving and sewing.
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Aigues-Vertes looks like any ordinary village (swissinfo) |
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Special environment
The idea for the village came about in the 1960s, when
some parents in Geneva who were worried about the future
of their mentally handicapped children, asked a group of
anthroposophists to help them create a village based
around a farm.
Bednarczyk explained that at the time the only
alternatives for mentally handicapped people were
hospitals or asylums.
The idea was to give mentally handicapped adults some
freedom and the ability to develop through their
relationships with the animals and other people.
According to Bednarczyk, the effects of the village’s
environment on its residents have been astounding. Their
life expectancy has jumped from just 40 years to 80 years
old – with the oldest current resident being 82.
“Once you stop progressing, you start dying and this is
absolutely unacceptable for me and for everybody in the
village,” he said.
Although Aigues Vertes exudes a very warm and content
atmosphere – it is hardly possible to walk down the street
without people shouting out greetings to each other or
giving friendly hugs - the social workers can sometimes
encounter problems with the residents.
“We have to be careful because if you lead them too far,
they are going to meet their limits and if you pass those
limits, they become frustrated and can become depressed,”
warned Bednarczyk.
Future development
The success of the Aigues Vertes concept has lead
Bednarczyk to declare the village a model for the social
reintegration of mentally handicapped adults in Europe.
To achieve this goal, a SFr64 million rebuilding programme
is planned, starting with the farm and moving on to the
other buildings. A nursing home will also be built in
which the residents can live out their final days.
It is hoped that a further 30 people can be welcomed to
Aigues Vertes at the completion of the work in 2010.
Financing will come from the Swiss government, the canton
of Geneva as well as from donations.
In 2003, which is officially the year of the handicapped,
the director also plans to go to Brussels to help form
working groups on how to improve the lives of handicapped
people - a theme very close to his heart.
“We want to change people’s opinions, ” said Bednarczyk.
“Often we look at handicapped people as though they are
completely different from us, but they are like us - they
are us.”
swissinfo, Isobel Johnson
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