Visually Impaired
Johannes Magaela, Phillip Masitenyane and Minah Funani sort plastic items inside Funani’s yard in Tembisa. Photos: Ihsaan Haffejee

Activists with disabilities are raising awareness about climate change

 

Johannesburg (25 September 2024) — On a warm afternoon in Tembisa, local resident Phillip Masitenyane can be found knee deep inside a garbage skip sifting for recyclable materials.

Masitenyane is visually impaired and has hearing loss. He uses his hands to feel for different materials in the rubbish – paper, plastic, metal tins and glass.

“Because I have to use my hands to touch and feel for items I don’t wear gloves, so it can sometimes be a bit dangerous if there is a sharp item or object inside here,” said Masitenyane.

Masitenyane is part of the Visually Impaired Community Development Organisation (VICDO) an NGO founded in 1995 and run by visually impaired activists in the Tembisa area.

VICDO, which advocates for the rights of people with disabilities, has recently involved itself in an environmental awareness program to promote the voices of people with disabilities in conversations on climate change.

Minah Funani (left) with Phillip Masitenyane (right) at a waste collection site at the back of a local school.

The organisation has partnered with four local schools, where the schools’ waste is sorted into recyclable materials. Members of VICDO go to the schools daily.

When they have collected a reasonable quantity of material, they take it to a local facility to process and recycle.

Visually impaired activists use their hands to feel for recyclable objects.

Minah Funani, a founding member of VICDO, said, “We are trying to learn more about these climate issues and its impact on us as people with disabilities. We are also trying to share our knowledge with other people so that we can take collective action.”

Funani recently advocated for facilities for the visually impaired to be installed at her local library. She now has access to a braille printer to produce information pamphlets about climate change, which she distributes to other visually impaired people in the township.

She also organises workshops bringing together environmental activists with members of VICDO so that knowledge can be shared.

“We need to raise awareness and educate ourselves and others in our community about these issues, because this is something that affects all of us,” said Funani.

Members of VICDO from left, Minah Funani, Mita Mukwevho, Johannes Magaela, Johannes Moseki and Phillip Masitenyane


Sources: GroundUp
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About the Author

Ashleigh Nefdt is a writer for Good Things Guy.

Ashleigh's favourite stories have always seen the hidden hero (without the cape) come to the rescue. As a journalist, her labour of love is finding those everyday heroes and spotlighting their spark - especially those empowering women, social upliftment movers, sustainability shakers and creatives with hearts of gold. When she's not working on a story, she's dedicated to her canvas or appreciating Mother Nature.

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