By Enyichukwu Enemanna
Dozens of South African chefs, community cooks, caterers, and culinary students joined forces Friday in Johannesburg to make 67,000 litres (17,700 gallons) of soup to feed the hungry, as part of activities to mark the Nelson Mandela Day.
First officially recognised by the United Nations in 2009, International Nelson Mandela Day encourages people to commemorate the birthday and legacy of South Africa’s first Black President by volunteering for 67 minutes, which is equivalent to his 67 years of public service.
To mark the birthday of Mandela, born in 1918, cooks all over the country made soup in their own kitchens to contribute towards reaching the target.
At the HTA School of Culinary Arts, in Johannesburg, cooks chopped vegetables, added legumes and sprinkled in a kaleidoscope of seasonings to make hearty soups. They brought in their broths from early morning until 5:30 p.m., when the final soup tally began.
“The 67,000 litres, it’s our take on 67 minutes,” said executive chef and chairman of NGO Chefs with Compassion, James Khoza. “I did a lentil soup with vegetables and a bit of chicken pieces inside. It’s not your normal kind of soup where you boil everything, then you make the soup out of it. For me, I look at flavour and is it quality as well.
“I know the guys are on the streets sometimes, or the beneficiaries, people tend to just give them whatever they feel like giving, but …. guys like us who come from hotel business, we understand that what we must feed people must be of that level, highest quality, that they feel like they are worthy because indeed they are worthy,” he added.
Every year, South Africans volunteer their time on July 18, cleaning up public spaces, helping at schools or hospitals, or performing humanitarian work and making donations.
For Chefs with Compassion, a non-profit organisation that works to combat hunger and food waste, the food drive is “a war against throwing away food and wasteful cooking,” Khoza says.
This year marks the sixth consecutive year that they’ve rescued excess food from farmers and shops that would otherwise have been thrown out. Instead, the chefs use it to make large quantities of soup to offer to the thousands of Johannesburg residents who are food insecure.
As part of her school’s effort to add 300 litres of soup to the 67,000 litres that the collective aims for, Tyra Nyakudya, an 18-year-old college student, spent most of the day cutting vegetables and monitoring the soup pots.
Although she was only six years old when the statesman passed away in 2013, she said his legacy of compassion and service remain in the memory because “he did everything in his power to give back to the community, which is why we’re doing this today.”
South Africa is among Africa’s leading food producers, but the 2024 National Food and Nutrition Security Survey (NFNSS) report found that 63.5% of South African households were food insecure, which translates to over 20 million people going without food every day and about 10.3 million tonnes of food being wasted annually.