Friday, November 15, 2024

Mandela Day – Sasol volunteers pack food hampers

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Sasol volunteers pack food hampers for welfare centres to mark Mandela Day

To honour Mandela’s legacy, Sasol volunteers, on Thursday, came out in numbers at the Secunda plant and in Brandspruit to pack food hampers that will be distributed to welfare centres across Sasol’s fenceline communities. The beneficiaries of the food hampers are orphanages and centres for vulnerable children and child-headed households within Mpumalanga’s Govan Mbeki Municipality, Lekwa, Dipaleseng and Nkomazi.

Similar packing events took place in Germiston, Durban, Sasolburg and Sandton.

“We know that this will not be enough,” said Sipho Maseko – Senior Vice President of Operations and Services, “But this is a little that we can do, we are encouraging our employees to continue doing the voluntary work that they do in their respective communities.”

“I hope that our employees will continue this every ay of their daily lives,” said Sipho.

Sasol volunteers and community stakeholders gathered to honour Mandela Day

Sasol will partner with the Department of Social Development for the distribution of the hampers. Some food hampers packed in Secunda will be delivered to the Enduduzweni Women and Children Initiative Centre in eMzinoni, the House of Hope Development Centre and the Okwam’ Nokwakho Drop-in Centre in eMbalenhle. The KwaZulu-Natal recipients are located in Durban South.

Through its #SasolforGood programme, Sasol continues to implement various social impact projects in line with the spirit of Mandela Month. The focus for this year’s Mandela Day activities is providing comfort to vulnerable groups and impacting society meaningfully.

Apart from delivering the food hampers, Sasol volunteers will also engage in various social programmes to support old age homes and disability centres across Govan Mbeki Municipality, in what is a demonstration of one of Sasol’s values: Be Caring.

The following was taken from the website: https://www.mandeladay.com/

MAKE EVERY DAY A MANDELA DAY
#ITISINYOURHANDS

Mandela Day is an annual global celebration that takes place on 18 July to honour the life and legacy of Nelson Mandela. This day is a call to action for individuals, communities, and organisations to take time to reflect on Mandela’s values and principles and to make a positive impact in their own communities.

What happened to 67 Minutes?

Nelson Mandela Day is perhaps best known for its slogan, “67 Minutes of Service,” but did you know where that came from and why it is no longer the slogan?

In 2009, it was calculated that Nelson Mandela spent 67 years of his life in service of social justice – in his years of activism and mobilisation, his years in prison, as well as his years as president of the Republic of South Africa. However, It seems that something went wrong with the calculation because, in 2009, Madiba had spent 65 years fighting for social justice since he joined the ANC in 1944. Even with this error, the 67 Minutes campaign went global and became the rallying call for Nelson Mandela International Day.

There were many notable campaigns that were started by the 67 Minutes campaign, perhaps most notably being the 67 Blankets initiative by Carolyn Steyn and the Mandela Day Libraries all across the country.

The 67 Minutes gave people an opportunity to take part in short, action-based projects in service of their communities. This included painting schools, cleaning up streets and making sandwiches.

Very quickly, the criticism came that Mandela Day was not making a sustainable impact in the world, but instead encouraged “do-goodism”, or short-term charity work. What the world needed were long-term, collaborative initiatives in honour of Madiba’s legacy.

And so, in 2011, the Nelson Mandela Foundation introduced the “Make Every Day A Mandela Day” slogan, encouraging people to take responsibility for social justice in their communities every day of the year. The hope was that Mandela Day would become more than just a day, but a global movement of ordinary people doing extraordinary things for their communities and Madiba.

Some of the food hampers packed by Sasol volunteers ready for distribution to different welfare organisations

However, after more than a decade of Nelson Mandela Day, we have learnt that even short-term interventions such as street cleanups and school painting have long-lasting impact for the community. It brings different sectors of society together in ways they may never have gotten together. It shows us the reality of this country and drives discourse and agendas for social justice.

This year, the slogan for Nelson Mandela International Day is a return to Madiba’s words when he gave us his birthday as a day for making good in the world – “It is still in your hands to combat poverty and inequity.”

With this message, we are motivating the world to take ownership of our communities and of the well-being of the people in our neighbourhoods. In the difficult economic and social environment we are in, nobody is coming to save us. It is up to all of us to uphold the legacy of our beloved icon, Nelson Mandela.