24 HOUR CRISIS LINE: 083 484 9409  
Tel: 021 852 5620 Fax: 086 519 4358   
Email: help@crisiscentre.org.za  
Helderberg Hospital Lourensford Road Somerset West  
Western Cape South Africa 7129
  
Rape Survivors
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Incest Survivors
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COUNSELLING OPTIONS FOR SURVIVORS
 

Help Options for Survivors

Face-to-face help is of course the best option because it allows a counsellor or therapist to help you more fully, but here are a number of options for you to receive help:

Telephone Help

24-hour help and advice in English and Afrikaans on 083 484 9409

Online Help

Please click here for online help or write to help@crisiscentre.org.za 

There are also various online support groups available. We cannot moderate anything in these groups as they are run by other people and we do not know what you might find there, but you can take a look none the less:

Online group http://www.pandys.org/find.html

Support Group Help

If you have been the victim of incest or childhood sexual abuse in any form these support groups will help:

Please call 072 493 4267 for support groups in Nomzamo / Lwandle / Sir Lowry's Pass (English, Afrikaans and Xhosa)

Please call 083 484 9409 for support groups in Somerset West (English and Afrikaans)

Or simply join us on Monday night at 19h00 on the corner of Batavia and Oldenland Road in Somerset West at the Rape Crisis offices.

Face-to-face Help

Please note making an appointment to see a counsellor is not essential, but if you just pop in you might have to wait before someone can see you.

Somerset West Crisis Centre:

Location - At the Helderberg Hospital, Lourensford Road in Somerset West

Crisis intervention is available 24-hours a day, 365 days a year either by phoning our 24-hour crisis line 083 484 9409 or by asking the police to bring you for help.

Counselling is available Monday - Friday from 8:30 a.m. till 5 p.m.

Languages spoken include English, Afrikaans and Xhosa (Xhosa counsellor is available Tuesdays and Fridays only)

Call 021-852 5620 or 083 484 9409 to make an appointment

Sir Lowry's Pass Counselling Office:

Location - At the police station in Sir Lowry's Pass

Counselling is available on Thursday from 9 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.

Languages spoken include English, Afrikaans and Xhosa

Call 072 493 4267 to make an appointment

Nomzamo / Lwandle Counselling Office:

Location - At the police station in Nomzamo / Lwandle

Counselling is available on Monday and Wednesday from 9 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.

Support Groups are available on certain Saturdays, please speak to the counsellor if you would like to join a support group

Languages spoken include English, Afrikaans and Xhosa

Call 072 493 4267 to make an appointment

 
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After being raped, even if you do not open a case please:

  • Get evidence collected within 24 hours and no later than 72 hours (the police will take you to the rape crisis centre or hospital)
  • Get anti-retrovirals & emergency contraception within 72 hours (anti-retrovirals are free to rape victims at government hospitals)
  • Get antibiotic medication to prevent other sexually transmitted infections
  • Get counselling from a person trained in rape trauma counselling - it is never too late

You can get all of the above free at our office at Helderberg Hospital, Somerset West

Call 083 484 9409 (24 hours a day) or 021-852 5620 (office hours) or write to help@crisiscentre.org.za.

You do not have to go through this alone.

RAPE TRAUMA SYNDROME is a recognised response to rape and sexual abuse and it includes a variety of problems including various long-term consequences, the symptoms are similar to Post Traumatic Stress. Although many rape survivors suffer from the symptoms of Rape Trauma Syndrome, not all survivors respond to rape in the same way. It is important to treat each rape survivor as an individual and to try and understand what the rape means to that particular person. Coping with being raped may also be more difficult if family, friends and colleagues are not supportive and/or blame the survivor. After the shock has passed, some survivors try to act as if nothing has happened. This is their way of trying to block out the rape, because they feel that they won't be able to cope if they let themselves remember what happened to them. However, if a rape survivor is going to recover well from the impact of a rape, s/he must let her/himself remember the rape and feel whatever s/he is feeling inside. When s/he does start remembering and feeling, s/he will also start suffering from symptoms, but these usually improve gradually over time. It often helps a survivor to have counselling if s/he is experiencing symptoms that upset her/him. The effects of rape are long term. Rape survivors never forget being raped, but many learn how to deal with the memory. Studies have shown that the symptoms suffered by a rape survivor three months after a rape usually continue over the next three to four years, although they do seem to improve over time. Sadly South Africa holds the for the highest rapes world-wide. Interpol estimates that over 1 million women are raped each year in South Africa.
We want to help you to "PUT THE PIECES TOGETHER AGAIN".