Cape Times

Cooper makes waves raising R70k for NPO swim school

- RAPHAEL WOLF raphael.wolf@inl.co.za

FORMER national swimmer Oneida Cooper spared a thought of praise for former Robben Island political prisoners after raising R70 000 for her non-profit swim school when she competed a swim from Robben Island to Bloubergst­rand yesterday.

“I don’t think there are any words that can describe the feeling of knowing what my father (Doctor Saths Cooper) and other political prisoners went through on the island, knowing their freedom was not guaranteed and my knowing that I was swimming for what they have guaranteed, and that is freedom for South Africa,” said 25-year-old Oneida.

She and eight supporters began their stamina-sapping swim at 7am to raise funds for her Making Waves Together South Africa NPO swimming school in Johannesbu­rg.

Conditions had not been favourable, with 3m swells throughout their swim, she said.

“It was a very tough 2.5km at the start and I wanted to stop.

“From there I had another four times that I pleaded with them to take me out of the water.

“If it wasn’t for my brother, Athisten Cooper, and my family and friends, and my eight fellow swimmers as well as all the people who donated money to the swim, I would not have been able to pull through.

“We raised about R70 000 and definitely see this amount rising.

“Our fund-raising does not stop because the swim is over.

“We’ll continue to fund-raise,” added Oneida.

She thanked everyone who had been part of her Making Waves Together South Africa NPO fund raiser, which was the first of many accomplish­ments that were to follow.

Oneida launched Making Waves Together South Africa last year to teach children, as well as adults, to swim.

Her previous swimming achievemen­ts include representi­ng South Africa at the 2008 Commonweal­th Youth Games in India and the All Africa Junior Championsh­ips in 2009, as well as having swam at the Youth Olympics and the Mare Nostrum Series in 2010, she said.

 ??  ?? FORMER national swimmer Oneida Cooper swam from Robben Island where her father Saths Cooper was jailed during apartheid for his political activism, to Bloubergst­rand. This was to raise funds for her non-profit making Making Waves Together South Africa swimming school.
FORMER national swimmer Oneida Cooper swam from Robben Island where her father Saths Cooper was jailed during apartheid for his political activism, to Bloubergst­rand. This was to raise funds for her non-profit making Making Waves Together South Africa swimming school.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa