Daily Maverick

Kind donations bring cheer to families in the Eastern Cape

Fifteen-hour days, singing, dancing, taxi violence and a safe escape: how the SA Harvest team distribute­d Daily Maverick’s food parcels. By

- Estelle Ellis

Since 20 December last year, the SA Harvest team has been hard at work distributi­ng food parcels in the Eastern Cape sponsored by R2.1-million in donations from Daily Maverick readers.

And wherever the members have arrived people have been singing and dancing.

“I have never experience­d anything like this,” said SA Harvest chief operating officer Ozzy Nel. “Everywhere we arrived it was like walking into a party.

“There was a great celebratio­n.”

The money donated by Daily Maverick readers sponsored 2,000 food parcels, each of which will last a family for six weeks.

The timing of the distributi­on was vital as school nutrition schemes had been closed for the holidays, leaving many children without their daily breakfast and lunch.

Nel said the team had already delivered 1,700 food parcels in some of the Eastern Cape’s poorest areas, namely Lusikisiki, Mbizana, Flagstaff and Mthatha.

“In Flagstaff, we were working with the schools where parents manage soup kitchens. In Mthatha we reached out to the waste-picker families, where we reached 200 families,” he said.

The team was dis- tributing food parcels to 200 families in Port St Johns when extreme taxi violence rocked the district. The coastal town shut down on 16 and 17 January when warring taxi associatio­ns started a gunfight with automatic firearms.

The SA Harvest team had to spend the night at an Airbnb in the area and was escorted to Mthatha by the police.

“I think another reason why this outreach is making me so proud is that our Lusikisiki team consists of nine graduates who could not get jobs,” said Nel.

“We taught them to manage the warehouse and now we are teaching them the basics of plant production to start community gardens.”

He said the last 300 food parcels would be distribute­d as soon as possible.

“This has been an incredible experience for me. I have never seen gratitude like this anywhere. Never. This is our youngest team and I am immensely proud of how they worked with every person they encountere­d. Some days they had to get up at 5am and were still working at 10pm,” Nel added.

In a report in October, the South African Human Rights Commission said the hunger crisis should be declared an emergency under disaster management legislatio­n.

About the province, it said: “The Eastern Cape, with its unique blend of cultures and landscapes, is facing a crisis that threatens the health and future of its children. Child malnutriti­on is not just a health concern; it is a fundamenta­l violation of the rights and wellbeing of the most vulnerable members of our society.

“The Eastern Cape’s children are its future, and their health and nutrition are inextricab­ly linked to the province’s developmen­t and progress.

“Ensuring their wellbeing is both a constituti­onal and moral imperative and a crucial step towards building a more equitable and prosperous Eastern Cape.”

Provincial statistics are devastatin­g.

One in five South African households is food insecure, meaning that it does not know where the next meal will come from or when. But in the Eastern Cape this applies to one in every three households. It is the country’s worst-affected province.

One in four children in the province is stunted by malnutriti­on.

Between 2021 and 2022, at least 1,000 children in the province were diagnosed with severe acute malnutriti­on, which led to the deaths of 120 children.

The Eastern Cape Health Department said that between September 2022 and August 2023 there were 456 new cases of severe acute malnutriti­on in children under five. Ninety-one deaths were recorded in the OR Tambo District Municipali­ty alone.

This is where the SA Harvest team was working.

 ?? ??
 ?? Photos: SA Harvest ?? The SA Harvest team prepares to distribute much-needed food parcels to households in Mbizana, Eastern Cape.
Photos: SA Harvest The SA Harvest team prepares to distribute much-needed food parcels to households in Mbizana, Eastern Cape.
 ?? ?? SA Harvest team members help recipients of the parcels at a second drop-off of food at Redoubt in Mbizana.
SA Harvest team members help recipients of the parcels at a second drop-off of food at Redoubt in Mbizana.
 ?? ?? Food is delivered to Qebedu, Lusikisiki, where the SA Harvest team brought welcome relief to a grandmothe­r looking after her grandchild­ren.
Food is delivered to Qebedu, Lusikisiki, where the SA Harvest team brought welcome relief to a grandmothe­r looking after her grandchild­ren.
 ?? ?? An SA Harvest team member gives a food parcel to a recipient and her children in Redoubt, Mbizana.
An SA Harvest team member gives a food parcel to a recipient and her children in Redoubt, Mbizana.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa