Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Yes we can!
Fairlady
|September/October 2020
Covid-19 may have moved in and set up camp all over SA, but thankfully there are some new kids on the block (actually, almost every block in Cape Town) fighting the good fight. These volunteers are keeping their neighbourhoods safe and connected while the virus tries to keep us apart.
IN March, there were murmurs that South Africa was about to be put on lockdown. A group of mutually connected volunteers realised that while a complete shutdown was necessary, it could be devastating for many communities. They decided to act quickly. A Facebook page was set up and an online volunteer form created – four months later, Cape Town Together (CTT) has more than 15 000 volunteers helping while the pandemic unfolds.
‘It evolved organically as a result of people wanting to offer a social response to Covid-19,’ says Marcela Guerrero Casas, one of the original CTT members who also happens to be a founder of Open Streets, an initiative that aims to change how we use, perceive and experience streets. ‘We realised that a medical solution is only part of the solution to this crisis.’ CTT is made up of public health professionals, community organisers, social activists, philosophers, scientists, political economics, psychologists and mental health experts. ‘There’s no “founder”,’ says CTT member Dr Leanne Brady. ‘It’s more about collective leadership. We don’t need another hero. It belongs to all of us.’
CTT established smaller groups called Community Action Networks (CANs) in several Cape Town neighbourhoods. Neighbours could link up with neighbours, share their skills and resources, and start establishing exactly where their community was most vulnerable under lockdown and what they needed to do in response. ‘There’s no copy-paste model,’ Leanne explains. ‘CANs are self-organising and are meeting the needs of their specific community.’ Some CANs are making sure people are being fed or are helping children access educational material online, while others are helping small businesses stay open and Covid-safe so that families don’t lose their income.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September/October 2020-Ausgabe von Fairlady.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Fairlady
Fairlady
The BOOK THIEF
Our daughter, Twenty-Five, is standing in front of me, bristling with indignation. Unusually, this time it's not me who has given her the giant pip; it's her brother, Twenty-Six. Apparently he lent two of her favourite books to someone, and when she wanted them back, he couldn't remember who.
2 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
SMART MONEY MOVES
From starting where you are right now to ending strong and secure, this expert advice is designed to help you take control of your cash, future and financial confidence.
5 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
SHIHAAM GORDON (40)
It took more than a year after noticing the first symptoms for Shihaam Gordon to finally get the surgery she needed.
3 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
TURKISH DELIGHT
There is no other city quite like Istanbul. Sprawled over two continents, this watery metropolis has been a sophisticated blend of culture, food and religion for centuries.
8 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
Misti Haircare x Actives
After building brands for others for more than 20 years, often as a single parent and sole provider, Misti Watson reached a point of depletion. The pressure to deliver for clients while raising two daughters felt unsustainable, so she finally turned towards an idea she had carried quietly for years. In 2024, she took the leap to create a brand of her own, and 14 months of determined work later, she launched Misti Haircare x Actives.
3 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
The DEPO-PROVERA PROBLEM
For decades, women have been told the shot is simple. Safe. Convenient. One injection every three months, no pills, no questions. Except there are questions. Depo-Provera has shaped millions of women's bodies and lives, yet its risks have often been whispered, buried in footnotes or not mentioned at all.
14 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
HOW JOZI IS GETTING ITS GROOVE BACK
A grassroots movement is connecting neighbourhoods, community organisations, and businesses big and small to revitalise Johannesburg's inner city. We meet the women involved in some of the projects.
6 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
THIS ISN'T A GOLD RUSH; IT'S A RENAISSANCE
You’ve most likely spotted a bespectacled Courtney Cox lookalike talking about menopause (or perimenopause) on Instagram, YouTube or Facebook.
9 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
HITTING the HIGH NOTE
Kate Hudson has danced through rom-coms, music, motherhood and entrepreneurship with charm. Now, with an Oscar nod and an album debut, she's proving the peaks only get better with time.
8 mins
March/April 2026
Fairlady
What we love right now
Currently on our radar. an Irish murder mystery, a nostalgic photo exhibition, a Boland getaway and loads of beauty products!
4 mins
March/April 2026
Translate
Change font size
