SA Harvest launches #BucketsofNutrition challenge for Mandela month

SA Harvest has launched the #BucketsofNutrition Challenge, a campaign designed to provide essential nutrition to families in need across Johannesburg, Durban, and Cape Town. This initiative aims to combat hunger and ensure sustenance beyond Mandela Day, feeding a family of four for up to three weeks. SA Harvest invites all South Africans to join this vital cause, honouring Mandela’s legacy by fighting hunger and uplifting communities. Picture: Supplied.

SA Harvest has launched the #BucketsofNutrition Challenge, a campaign designed to provide essential nutrition to families in need across Johannesburg, Durban, and Cape Town. This initiative aims to combat hunger and ensure sustenance beyond Mandela Day, feeding a family of four for up to three weeks. SA Harvest invites all South Africans to join this vital cause, honouring Mandela’s legacy by fighting hunger and uplifting communities. Picture: Supplied.

Published Jul 6, 2024

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Volunteers can also donate their time to help pack buckets

This Mandela Month, SA Harvest is calling on all South Africans to join the #BucketsofNutrition Challenge, an initiative designed to provide essential nutrition to families in need across Joburg, Durban, and Cape Town.

This campaign aims to address immediate hunger and provide sustenance that lasts beyond Mandela Day, feeding a family of four for up to three weeks.

Hunger remains a critical issue in South Africa. According to Statistics South Africa, nearly 20% of South African households have inadequate access to food.

CEO and founder of SA Harvest, Alan Browde, said the #BucketsofNutrition challenge seeks to tackle this issue by mobilising communities to pack buckets filled with essential, non-perishable food items.

"Mandela Month is a time to reflect on the values that Madiba stood for, including unity, compassion, and the fight against poverty and hunger. Our #BucketsofNutrition Challenge is not just about a single day of giving but about making a lasting impact. Every bucket packed will provide a family with several nutritious meals, extending the spirit of Mandela Day well beyond the 18th of July,” he said.

Participants can get involved in three primary ways: by packing buckets, donating their time, or contributing financially. Corporates, families, and community groups are encouraged to pack buckets filled with essential food items, which will help feed a family of four for an extended period.

Volunteers can also donate their time to help pack buckets or assist with logistics. Financial donations are welcomed and will be used to purchase ingredients for the buckets, with every R500 donated funding one bucket.

To join the #BucketsofNutrition Challenge, participants should register on the SA Harvest website, set a target for the number of buckets they aim to pack, and use the downloadable bucket list to purchase the necessary items.

Packed buckets can be delivered to participating partner malls and Makro stores – in Joburg at Melrose Arch and Makro Woodmead, in Cape Town at the V&A Waterfront and Makro Ottery/Montague Gardens, and in Durban at The Pavilion and Makro Springfield. For donations of 50 buckets or more, SA Harvest will collect within a 30km radius of their warehouses.

“SA Harvest's mission is to end hunger by rescuing good food that would otherwise go to waste and delivering it to over 200 beneficiary organisations. The #BucketsofNutrition Challenge amplifies this mission, empowering communities to make a tangible difference. By participating, South Africans can help provide nutritious meals to those in need and raise awareness about the importance of nutrition in combating food vulnerability,” Browde added.

SA Harvest invites corporate South Africa and all those wanting to take action against hunger to be part of this important initiative. Together, we can honour Mandela’s legacy by taking concrete steps to fight hunger and uplift our communities. For more information and to register, visit www.saharvest.org.

SA Harvest is taking a revolutionary approach to ending hunger in South Africa, by addressing its systemic root causes, leveraging innovative technology, and simultaneously tackling the immediate need, through rescuing nutritious food and delivering it where it’s needed most.

For more information, go to www.saharvest.org Since inception in October 2019, SA Harvest has delivered the equivalent of 53,9 million meals by rescuing 16,2 million kilograms of food that would otherwise have ended up in landfill.

Saturday Star

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