Without meaning to be unreasonably preachy, one would like to state, and in definite terms, that when there is a serious crisis all of us should jump in to deal with the impending problem. The person willing to help need not be a man worth millions because help is
When 7.2 million South Africans faced unemployment because of the pandemic, activist Ilka Stein created a mobile grocery store to help combat hunger. The renovated school bus brings affordable food to neighborhoods across Johannesburg.
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JOHANNESBURG (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - When Sidney Beukes got his bus driver’s licence, he never imagined himself behind the wheel of a 40-year-old school bus that has been turned into a mobile grocery store serving low-income residents of Johannesburg.
The bus is not an easy drive: there is no power steering and it chugs along. But Beukes said every time a customer climbs aboard to buy groceries they could not afford in the shops, he is reminded of why he would not want to drive anything else.
“We’re here for them, when people are stuck without food and it’s been a tough month . it makes me happy to see them happy,” said Beukes, 24, standing next to the gleaming white bus in the South African city’s working-class Bertrams area.
Every push counts when life’s wheels creak
4 hours ago Three days a week, the bus parks in different city neighbourhoods where the team tell customers what the project aims to achieve. Without meaning to be sermonic, one would like to state, and in no uncertain terms, that when there is a serious crisis everyone should jump in to deal with the issue. The person willing to help need not be a man worth millions because help is always a matter of feelings and not means. Some millionaires have been known for shutting their doors to beggars. Some ordinary humans have set their fraternity talking by sharing their modest possessions.
Thomson Reuters Foundation/Kim Harrisberg Global Citizen LifeDefeat Poverty
This Zero Waste Low-Cost Grocery Bus in South Africa is Tackling Food Insecurity
An activist has taken it upon herself to bring groceries to low-income communities in Johannesburg.
By Kim Harrisberg
JOHANNESBURG, May 24 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – When Sidney Beukes got his bus driver s licence, he never imagined himself behind the wheel of a 40-year-old school bus that has been turned into a mobile grocery store serving low-income residents of Johannesburg.
The bus is not an easy drive: there is no power steering and it chugs along. But Beukes said every time a customer climbs aboard to buy groceries they could not afford in the shops, he is reminded of why he would not want to drive anything else.