Music soothes, heals and brings life. The mothers and gogos of the One to One Africa charity know this well and are using their voices through song to act as a balm for broken spirits and improve mental health care where it’s really needed.
Eastern Cape, South Africa (07 October 2025) – Deep in the rural villages of the Eastern Cape, where music born from lived experience is becoming medicine for the soul, a quiet revolution is unfolding.
In communities where the harsh realities of poverty strip away even the most basic comforts, One to One Africa’s (OTOA) Mentor Mothers are rewriting the script on mental health care through melodies. These women, trained in basic healthcare and embedded in the homes of young mothers, are not only administering physical remedies. They are singing, too!
Through CHIME (Community Health Intervention through Musical Engagement), a ground-breaking initiative recently showcased in a vibrant workshop hosted by OTOA, Mentor Mothers are using original songs to soothe trauma, reduce anxiety, and foster connection.
“These are not AI-generated melodies or imported interventions. They are raw, real, and rooted in the stories of the women who sing them. Songs about gender-based violence, rape, diabetes, hypertension, and the daily weight of survival,” says Gqibelo Dandala, OTOA’s Executive Director.
“In a world turning to artificial intelligence and alternative health solutions, we offer something profoundly human. These songs are a balm for broken spirits. They carry the wisdom of women who have walked through fire and still choose to sing.”
Health workers, researchers, and community leaders got to explore how music can be woven into maternal and child health programmes at the recent CHIME workshop, held in partnership with the Perinatal Mental Health Project, NIHR, and UK International Development.
The response was overwhelming: a call to amplify this simple yet powerful remedy across borders.
This World Mental Health Day (10 October), OTOA urges global media, health advocates, and policymakers to look beyond the headlines and algorithms to a small village in the Eastern Cape whose name few can pronounce, but whose songs echo with hope.
“Let the world listen. Let the healing begin,” concludes Dandala.
To help amplify the voices of OTOA’s Mentor Mothers, email valerie@onetoonechildrensfund.org.za
Sources: Supplied
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