The Independent on Saturday

Meet Durban’s superhero blood donors

- WENDY JASSON DA COSTA wendy.jdc@inl.co.za

SUPERHEROE­S don’t always wear capes – and they become even more important as we enter the busy festive season.

Take Durban’s Bob de Villiers, 83, and Dudley Stillwell, 78, for example: the two men have probably saved hundreds of lives in their 45 years of giving blood.

Last weekend the South African National Blood Service (SANBS) honoured them and the many other brave men and women who freely give a pint of love to ensure that lives are saved or improved every day. The service says one whole blood donation can save up to three people’s lives.

Durban South SANBS donor relations practition­er Msimelelo Lose said the awards ceremony was to recognise the 65 people who had reached the 50-donation milestone, as well as every 25th interval thereafter, between July 2020 and June 2021.

Stillwell has given 450 pints, Stuart Kennard 250 and Robert “Bob” de Villiers 225.

“We had remarkable milestone donors, but all our donors are remarkable people because they save lives,” said Lose.

The Independen­t on Saturday spoke to Stillwell and De Villiers, who both started their donations “in the old Transvaal” before moving to KwaZulu-Natal.

Both men have wives who are terrified of needles but always remind them when it is time to donate.

De Villiers, who lives in eManzimtot­i, is a former mine worker who was encouraged to be a donor by his late brother-in-law, Andries Hartzenber­g, in 1964, and has a collection of Parker pens from the SANBS for all the milestones he’s reached.

“When I got that standing ovation on Saturday it was one of the best moments in my life because I thought there are people who recognise that there are others who do good in the world and not everyone is a criminal or a thief. Among all people there is good.

“It’s like that Cadbury’s ad on TV: there’s a glass of good in everyone,” he said.

De Villiers has had many strange encounters over the years; like the woman who shunned him for being from the “vampire club” when she saw his SANBS badge. Or the time when he walked kilometres in the hot sun to get to the donation booth only to find it had temporaril­y relocated, and he had to walk even farther to get there.

He’s also endured racist insults by people who questioned why he was a donor when he had no idea who would get his blood.

Stillwell is a handyman who lives in Glenwood and has been a donor since he turned 18.

 ?? SHELLEY KJONSTAD/ Newspapers ?? BOB de Villiers, 83, from eManzimtot­i, with the medal he earned for donating 225 pints of blood. | Independen­t
SHELLEY KJONSTAD/ Newspapers BOB de Villiers, 83, from eManzimtot­i, with the medal he earned for donating 225 pints of blood. | Independen­t

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