Hlokomela - Sepedi for To care - is a primary health and social welfare organisation in Hoedspruit started in 1990 by a Limpopo farm wife and nurse, Christine du Preez.
Photo Cred: Discovery | Supplied

Hlokomela – Sepedi for To care – is a primary health and social welfare organisation in Hoedspruit started in 1990 by a Limpopo farm wife and nurse, Christine du Preez.

 

Limpopo, South Africa (08 December 2021) – As with so many vital healthcare NGOs in South Africa, the resilience and fortitude learned in the seemingly impossible battle against HIV and AIDS proved vital in saving lives when COVID-19 landed on our shores.

Hlokomela (Sepedi for “To care”), a primary health and social welfare organisation in Hoedspruit started in 1990 by a Limpopo farm wife and nurse, Christine du Preez, was no different. Hundreds of seasonal fruit pickers and their family members started dying mysteriously from then-unknown HIV and AIDS, which wreaked havoc with communities and the local agricultural economy.

“I think we learned we can fight anything. Nothing’s too big. And we learned to care for each other. That was the most important in the end,’ she says.

Watch the inspiring story of how a small NGO has pivoted from providing screening and care for HIV and AIDS to COVID-19:

Du Preez set up a makeshift clinic in one room, at first lit by a single candle. She arrived at 05:00 when the queue of those seeking help – officially denied help by the government – was already stretching into the predawn shadows.

Within a few short years and belatedly armed with antiretroviral drugs, Hlokomela grew into a sprawling organisation caring for 16 000 farmworkers at the height of the Aids epidemic. Today it spreads across the thousands of hectares of lush fruit orchards surrounding Hoedspruit.

“With Aids it was harder, I think, because the Department of Health at that stage didn’t think there was something like Aids, so we had to fight that too. But with COVID, the government really came to the party. I think that helped all of us,’ she says phlegmatically.

Emile van der Westhuizen, agricultural manager of Bavaria Estate, one of the bigger spreads of mango and lemon trees in the district, says COVID-19 hit in the midst of their harvest season.

“We were extremely worried and nervous because we had almost 800 people on the farm and didn’t know what to expect,” he confesses.

Hlokomela immediately stepped up, providing education and awareness campaigns on social distancing and sanitising and distributing masks.

More fear of the unknown

Hlokomela auxiliary nurse Merriam Ndlovu helped with an ambitious screening programme. Ndlovu scheduled awareness meetings and moving from farm to farm, bus stop to bus stop, literally bringing to life another interpretation of Hlokomela (“Be careful”) and telling them just why this was so necessary.

Du Preez echoes Van der Westhuizen: “I could see the workers were also really scared. They didn’t know. It’s strange – they asked the nurses as if we know everything!”

Adds Doris Malepe, of the linked Nompilo NGO and a Hlokomela counsellor, “we told ourselves as front-line workers there is no way we’re going to hide ourselves from this Corona.” 

Their courage and modelling of non-pharmaceutical interventions soon touched 10 000 farmworkers, many of whom were unavoidably out of a job.

“That was the roughest,” recalls Du Preez, adding that entire families soon went hungry. Hlokomela quickly pivoted their mobile resources and began coordinating food relief with 6 000 food parcels and 10 tonnes of citrus food distributed to farmworkers in need.

The risk to their workers of contracting COVID-19 was an ever-present threat. Fortunately, both Discovery Health and Gift of the Givers came to the rescue, providing personal protection equipment (PPE) and other resources.

Says Du Preez, “that was wonderful because you must remember, we didn’t have a budget for this. You know you feel alone because everything … it’s just too big. That was the feeling, but our staff was wonderful, really pulling together. And nobody was complaining, and everybody was just doing what they need to do.”

She believes that Hlokomela’s culture of caring and a passion for people literally defines their organisation and its volunteers.

Perhaps farm manager Van der Westhuizen sums Hlokomela – and Du Preez – up best: “I think often it’s an absolutely thankless job. She does so much for the community. She just doesn’t know how to give up.”


Sources: Discovery | Hlokomela
Don’t ever miss the Good Things. Download the Good Things Guy App now on Apple or Google
Have something to add to this story? Please share it in the comments or follow GoodThingsGuy on Facebook & Twitter to keep up to date with good news as it happens, or share your good news with us by clicking here
Click the link below to listen to the Good Things Guy Podcast with Brent Lindeque – South Africa’s very own Good Things Guy. He’s on a mission to change what the world pays attention to, and he truly believes that there’s good news all around us. In the Good Things Guy podcast, you’ll meet these everyday heroes & hear their incredible stories:
Or watch an episode of Good Things TV below, a show created to offer South Africans balance in a world with what feels like constant bad news. We’re here to remind you that there are still so many good things happening in South Africa & we’ll leave you feeling a little more proudly South African.

About the Author

Brent Lindeque is the founder and editor in charge at Good Things Guy.

Recognised as one of the Mail and Guardian’s Top 200 Young South African’s as well as a Primedia LeadSA Hero, Brent is a change maker, thought leader, radio host, foodie, vlogger, writer and all round good guy.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *