When Words Are Not Enough
Every time a child goes missing, the headlines explode across social media and television. There are calls for help, promises of investigations, and a brief wave of public outrage. And then… silence.
The media moves on, and community grows tired, and the family is left behind — desperate for answers that may never come.
Joshlin Smit is not the first child to disappear, and she won’t be the last. How many month later, and the girl from Lamberts Bay is still missing, Not forgetting a boy also disappeared almost a year ago from the same town…And few people outside their family still ask – Where is they? These stories are not isolated cases, they are symptoms of a broken system — one where children pay the highest price for the failures of adults.
Communities and Organizations Must Work Together
It’s easy to point fingers — at parents, at drugs, at criminals, at poverty. But real solutions require more than blame. No single person or institution can fix this alone. It takes collaboration between communities, organizations, and even government agencies. Too often, people work in silos, and that’s why we fail.
The reality is simple: until communities themselves become part of the solution, children will keep disappearing.
There Will Always Be a “Kelly”
As long as poverty and crime thrive, there will always be a Kelly — someone caught in a life without a way out. Society is quick to demonize individuals, to label them as the villain, without addressing the deeper issues that create them.
How many other Kellys are walking our streets today? How many are one step away from becoming the next headline?
When Politicians Only Make Promises
With every tragedy, politicians jump on the bandwagon. They promise investigations, claim that the justice system will function, and assure the public that this will never happen again. But it does happen again — over and over.
Why?
Because words are cheap, and action is hard.
Politicians must stop using tragedies for publicity and start driving real change. Until then, communities must ask: Where were you when we truly needed you?
A Justice System That Does Not Protect Its People.
How many cases are actually solved? How many disappear into the archives, forgotten and unresolved? If the government and law enforcement truly cared about its people, they would answer these questions with urgency.
How is it possible for children to vanish without a trace? Why do families have to beg for justice for years? Why is there no real shift in how these cases are handled?
If these questions remain unanswered, the message is clear: The justice system does not protect children like Joshlin.
And that is unacceptable.
This story is not about blame — it’s about accountability. It’s about refusing to accept a system where children disappear, and the world simply moves on…!!!!