New Smiles
Operation Smile volunteers, Dr Jenitha Dairam and Dr Shetil Nana examine 18 month old Langutelani Knowlegde Mopai while his mother Sharon looks on at their Mbombela surgical programme in May

Five incredible South Africans raised R1 million for Operation Smile to help give more children new smiles by traversing the world.

 

South Africa (24 August 2023) – Five South Africans have run, walked, cycled and kayaked 15 500km over the past 12 months to raise over R1-million for Operation Smile South Africa and on Thursday 24th August, Dan Meyer, Richard Kohler, Bob Bolus, David Grier and Andrew Stuart will be honoured at a cocktail event in Cape Town.

Operation Smile SA has been a driving force in delivering safe cleft surgery since 2006 and has built up a volunteer network of 126 specialists who will give their time and expertise for three surgical programmes in the next year.

The athletes all tackled solo challenges to raise funds and will share their stories, what they learnt and how they overcame obstacles on their expeditions,  at the event, which will be a true celebration of the resilience and never-give-up attitude of South Africans.

Ride on

Dan Meyer’s bicycle was playing up, and steadily getting worse. If he’d been at home in Cape Town, it wouldn’t have been a problem, but he was alone in a deserted area of the US with 50km and a mountain range between him and the nearest repair shop.

“The elevation killed my legs, my bike, and my will to live. Finally at 4.15pm I made it to the ‘bike shop’ which looked like it hadn’t been open in years. Cobwebs on the door,” Meyer posted on Facebook.

“So I tried to fix the bike myself and made it so much worse. Now it doesn’t ride at all. I’m stranded in the middle of nowhere, California, with no bike. Shit.”

The good news is that in July the 40-year-old businessman solved the problem and completed his 3,000km ride from border to border down the west coast of the US.  In July 2022 he cycled solo 3 500km across Europe from Copenhagen to Rome in his first Smile Cycle. Overcoming obstacles is what endurance athletes do.

The same can be said of children throughout the country and the continent who are born with cleft lips and palates. So the strong bond between the two groups may not be a coincidence. But it’s certainly a blessing.

That’s because Meyer and four other endurance athletes from South Africa have raised more than R1m in the past year for Operation Smile. In turn, the non-profit helped 110 children with cleft conditions, mainly from rural communities in Mpumalanga and the Eastern Cape.

“We delivered two surgical programmes in each province to enable patients to receive safe cleft surgery quicker and referred patients requiring more complex treatment to specialist hospitals,” says Sarah Scarth, the executive director of Operation Smile South Africa.

“We also deployed 60 volunteers – cleft surgeons, anaesthetists, paediatricians and nurses – to serve on Operation Smile surgical programmes across Africa, benefiting a further 1,000 patients with clefts.”

Another of the athletes who supported Operation Smile is Richard Kohler, who in February became the first solo kayaker to paddle 7,000km from Cape Town to Salvador, Brazil.

“We raised over half a million rand, ensuring that more children will receive corrective cleft surgery,” says Kohler, who recently joined an Operation Smile mission in Mpumalanga.

“I stood next to the surgeons while they were operating,” he says. “The passion I saw there was what kept me going while I was paddling. And I loved the instant gratification of what Operation Smile does – it changes children’s lives almost immediately.”

Stepping up

Bob Bolus, who marked his 65th birthday by walking 500km from Mossel Bay to Pringle Bay last October and November, also found deeper meaning in his exploit.

“We are all destined to create our own legacy,” he said. “There are children born every day with a cleft lip and palate. I have chosen to change these children’s lives to enable them to live in a happy and dignified way.

“I have chosen to enable children to smile. I smile a lot, and people smile back. Smiling people are happy people.”

Meyer and Kohler are quick to mention David Grier as the man who inspired them not only to tackle difficult challenges but to raise money for Operation Smile along the way.

After their latest adventure – a 1,500km run along the coastline of Portugal and Madeira in June and July – Grier and his running partner Andrew Stuart round out the quintet of athletes Operation Smile will honour this week.

Grier, 63, says it’s the memories from surgical missions that have sustained him on his runs, which have taken him about 30,000km through China, Madagascar, India, Cuba, Thailand and North Korea.

“When I’m out there and I’m struggling to take the next step, I just think of what that next step means, how it’s going to change a life. It’s a big driver for me,” he says.

“I’ve had the privilege of going on a surgical mission, meeting a child before surgery, seeing it come out of theatre, meeting the parents, then seeing that child given a new lease on life. I’ve also seen the effects on families who have been ostracised and pulled apart because of how their child looks.

“That’s why Operation Smile has been so important in my life, and such a worthwhile and worthy cause to support.”

To find out more about Operation Smile or how you can help the organisation, visit www.operationsmile.org.za and or follow them on Instagram, Facebook and LinkedIn.


Sources: Press Release
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About the Author

Tyler Leigh Vivier is a writer for Good Things Guy.

Her passion is to spread good news across South Africa with a big focus on environmental issues, animal welfare and social upliftment. Outside of Good Things Guy, she is an avid reader and lover of tea.

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