Volunteers cover books for learners in Soshanguve

3
Volunteers cover books for learners in Soshanguve
Volunteers cover books for learners in Soshanguve

Africa-PressSouth-Africa. Pretoria – As a gesture to plough back into communities, a group of 25 volunteers took time yesterday to cover 400 textbooks for some learners in Soshanguve.

Under the banner #ThusaNgwanaGeno (help your brethren), the group congregated at Mathaga Primary School in the township ahead of schools reopening in two weeks time.

The brains behind the initiative Dr John Molepo said: “Normally, we would do it when learners are back at school so that we can also teach them how to cover their books, but because of Covid-19 we had to readjust.”

Molepo – an activist and a senior lecturer at the University of Mpumalanga – said the idea behind the initiative was to create uniformity in schools by making sure there was no distinction between learners from rich and poor families.

“We also wanted to reduce the financial burden on parents,” he said.

Through the #ThusaNgwanaGeno initiative, some students at institutions of higher learning were previously assisted with obtaining their drivers’ licences.

“We also assisted students in universities with tuition fees, outstanding fees and registration fees,” Molepo said.

He commended people who made the charity work possible by opening their hearts and purses to help the needy.

“There is a motivation by an African proverb that ‘If you want to go fast, go alone, and if you want to go far, go together’. I am one person who believes in collectivism, that whatever that you do you need to plough back to your community, more especially where you grew up,” Molepo said.

Molepo, 31, did his primary school at Mathaga and was the youngest to have a PhD in public affairs conferred on him at the Tshwane University of Technology in 2019.

In the same year, President Cyril Ramaphosa recognised Molepo’s activism, honouring the young academic with a presidential award in the category of compassion for the “immense value of his contribution to the community”.

His former teacher, Sally Mothupi, said: “I am happy that our former learner John Molepo didn’t forget where he came from. I taught him here at Mathaga primary school.”

She expressed gratitude to Molepo for helping learners who can’t afford to buy book covers.

“We have challenges of learners who come to school with their books not covered. I am very proud of him and he is a doctor today. It means we laid a proper foundation. May the good God bless him,” she said.

One of the volunteers, Duduzile Masombuka, said the initiative was bred from raising funds for university students at road intersections, where motorists donate as little as R5.

“There is a saying that ’when you look good you feel good and when you feel good, you do good’. We believe that if a child has a school book that is nicely covered that is a motivation that says ‘here is something that is good before you, take care of it and preserve it and then run with it’,” Masombuka said.

Five schools in four provinces, which include the North West, Limpopo, Mpumalanga and Gauteng, will benefit from the textbook-covering initiative.

“For this week we want to cover 1 600 books, and we are positive that we are going to achieve it,” Masombuka said.

Pretoria News

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here