• Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Friday, July 3, 2026
No Result
View All Result
Church Walking With Poor
OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • Discernment of spirits with the poor
    • Establishing a dedicated Parish or Chaplaincy or Small Christian Community
    • Offering pastoral accompaniment in a campaign for social justice that the poor of St. Francis Have Initiated
    • A charity and social development project (school, clinic, income generation etc) dedicated to the pastoral care of the poor of Saint Francis
    • Accompanying the poor who are doing the project of the parliament of Francesco
    • Fifth site: Where the Bruised and hurting Church allows God (the Good Samaritan Par Excellence) to stop with them, clean the wounds and bind them
  • Ministry of Presence: Its mission strategies
    • Mission strategies to deepen Church ministry to the homeless, the poor in shanty towns and slum settlements
    • For those doing ministry to the victims of state violence (war/genocide, state repression, extrajudicial assassination) and survivors of rape and human trafficking,
    • For those doing ministry to communities harmed severely by large-scale mining project
    • For those doing ministry to communities forcibly removed from their land/their homes and victims of land grabbing
    • Our Human rights observatory on business, land grabbing and critical minerals
  • Newsletter
  • News \ Articles
  • Home
  • Discernment of spirits with the poor
    • Establishing a dedicated Parish or Chaplaincy or Small Christian Community
    • Offering pastoral accompaniment in a campaign for social justice that the poor of St. Francis Have Initiated
    • A charity and social development project (school, clinic, income generation etc) dedicated to the pastoral care of the poor of Saint Francis
    • Accompanying the poor who are doing the project of the parliament of Francesco
    • Fifth site: Where the Bruised and hurting Church allows God (the Good Samaritan Par Excellence) to stop with them, clean the wounds and bind them
  • Ministry of Presence: Its mission strategies
    • Mission strategies to deepen Church ministry to the homeless, the poor in shanty towns and slum settlements
    • For those doing ministry to the victims of state violence (war/genocide, state repression, extrajudicial assassination) and survivors of rape and human trafficking,
    • For those doing ministry to communities harmed severely by large-scale mining project
    • For those doing ministry to communities forcibly removed from their land/their homes and victims of land grabbing
    • Our Human rights observatory on business, land grabbing and critical minerals
  • Newsletter
  • News \ Articles
No Result
View All Result
Church Walking With Poor
No Result
View All Result
Home Problem of violence, crime and alcohol abuse: Church walking with rape victims and tavern owners

Church concerned that excessive use of alcohol is killing our young people

September 18, 2025
in Problem of violence, crime and alcohol abuse: Church walking with rape victims and tavern owners
Church concerned that excessive use of alcohol is killing our young people
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The research commissioned by the SA Catholic Bishops Conference (SACBC) and the DG Murray Trust has found that the socioeconomic costs of alcohol abuse are higher than previously thought.

Citing excessive alcohol consumption for the deaths in the SACBC’s report, Strengthening Communities Through Reducing Alcohol-Related Harms Project, researcher and associate professor of sociology at the University of Johannesburg, Kezia Batisai, said many previous surveys on the costs of alcohol only looked at “the direct economic impact, not at the social costs”.

The study suggested that the economic and social costs associated with alcohol abuse in South Africa were far higher than previously thought, with the burden outstripping the sector’s economic contribution and making alcohol “the most harmful drug at a population level” in some provinces.

Based on some of their feedback, the report has also found that tools and many existing interventions – including law enforcement and legislation – to prevent and reduce alcohol-related harm, were ineffective.

Despite the alcohol sector being a key player in the economy – with the wine value chain alone contributing R36 billion per year into the gross domestic product (GDP), while employing a third of a million people – social costs were huge.

Batisai said previous surveys on the costs of alcohol only looked at the direct economic impact, not at the social costs, with the 2003 study having estimated the economic impact of alcohol at R8.7 billion – exclusive of the social costs borne by drinkers and those affected by people’s drinking.

The social cost associated with alcohol was also linked to gender-based violence, sexual crime, the implications of unsafe sex, mental health issues and increasing levels of poverty.

“Alcohol is the most widespread drug of abuse in South Africa and the most harmful drug at a population level,” Batisai added.

She interviewed dozens of tavern owners and patrons in Klerksdorp and Port Elizabeth, as well as students at the Nelson Mandela and KwaZulu-Natal universities. When it came to help for drinkers who wanted to tackle their alcohol dependency, most patrons said they were aware of help forums but indicated little interest, due to social stigma.

About 80% of those polled in Klerksdorp said they knew about bylaws, but 64% said these did not help reduce alcohol-related harms, especially among minors.

“Some tavern owners like to do things as they wish, like having underaged children in taverns,” one respondent said. “Underage drinking does not matter at all. You find that during the day, a young boy in a full school uniform can get to a tavern and get a beer,” said another respondent.

In Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape, patrons and tavern owners also noted a lack of implementation of noncompliance – with most taverns opening early and closing extremely late.

“In some cases, the police are the friends of the tavern owners, so they the owners are protected,” a Klerksdorp respondent said. Another respondent alleged police took bribes.

Source: Excessive alcohol use killing young SA men – reveals research | George Herald

Next Post

The Catholic Church has been involved in land redistribution in South Africa

Connect with us

Recommended

Catholic Bishops Laud Corruption “whistleblowers” in South Africa, Pledge Support

Catholic Bishops stand in solidarity with whistleblowers

10 months ago
South African bishops file class-action suit against mining company over black lung disease

South African bishops file class-action suit against mining company over black lung disease

10 months ago

SACBC Justice and Peace Commission is an agency of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference.
Its mission and role: “To proclaim the good news to the poor, to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free.” (Luke 4:18).

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Church Walking With Poor All Rights Reserved. Designed by Vasiliki Technologies.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Take Action
    • Establishing a dedicated Parish or Chaplaincy or Small Christian Community
    • Fifth site: Where the Bruised and hurting Church allows God (the Good Samaritan Par Excellence) to stop with them, clean the wounds and bind them
    • A charity and social development project (school, clinic, income generation etc) dedicated to the pastoral care of the poor of Saint Francis
    • Accompanying the poor who are doing the project of the parliament of Francesco
    • Offering pastoral accompaniment in a campaign for social justice that the poor of St. Francis Have Initiated
  • News \ Articles
  • Newsletter

© 2025 Church Walking With Poor All Rights Reserved. Designed by Vasiliki Technologies.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In