He may be soft-spoken but, for Serkan Ergul, no crisis is insurmountable.
From distributing a food to the poorest of the poor in an informal settlement near Marlboro, north of Johannesburg, to distributing blankets to needy communities in the West Rand's Westbury, Ergul thrives in times of an emergency.
First to visit and take up the plight of Sarah Hlongwane destitute woman living with 12 children in a makeshift one room structure in a heavily congested part of the Maphonyane informal settlement near Marlboro Gardens, north of Joburg - Ergul, director of non-profit organisation Time to Care Trust (TTC), remarks: "Something has to be done.
"This is extremely moving to see a terrible reality of how a single mother and grandmother is struggling to survive.
"This situation really touched my heart and gave me a renewed feeling of purpose and resolve." Hlongwane's plight - a microcosm of the 55.5% of the South African population living in poverty, representing the country's is what high inequality levels Ergul grapples with on a daily basis.
Reflecting on some anecdotes on people he has helped in times of need, Ergul says: "There was a woman from Tembisa who desperately needed groceries because there was no food at home.
Bu hikaye The Citizen dergisinin August 17, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Citizen dergisinin August 17, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Heather's Boy prepares for Cape
FORM: UNBEATEN DE KOCK RUNNER TO CONFIRM HIS REPUTATION AHEAD OF CAPE GUINEAS
Courage wins the day for Atticus
IMPRESSIVE: LAIRD-TRAINED GELDING FIGHTS ON GAMELY TO CLAIM R6M BETWAY SUMMER CUP
PIRATES COME UNSTUCK
PREMIERSHIP: STELLENBOSCH PUT ABRUPT END TO BUCS' PERFECT START
Cut Bavuma some slack
Temba Bavuma has often been praised by coaches and teammates for his leadership abilities, but as a specialist batter the Proteas skipper must have been frustrated by his lengthy struggle to convert fifties into centuries.
Proteas keep growing as a unit
South Africa's batters are feeding well off each other as they start to find consistency at the highest level, according to Proteas coach Shukri Conrad, after they shone again in the dominant victory over Sri Lanka in the first Test in Durban which concluded on Saturday.
Wallabies far from finished product
Australia coach Joe Schmidt says his side are \"maybe\" not at the level yet to win the three Test series with the British & Irish Lions next year but they are ready to make it a \"contest\".
Proteas keep their heads up
With England having secured a 3-0 clean sweep in the T20 International series that concluded at the weekend, Proteas all-rounder Nondumiso Shangase says the national women's team are keeping their heads up as they prepare for a three-match ODI series against the tourists.
Bulls flex their muscles abroad
URC: DOWN CONNACHT AS SHARKS SINK THE STORMERS
Kane ruled out 'for the time being'
Bayern Munich striker Harry Kane (right) has been ruled out \"for the time being\", with a hamstring tear, the club announced yesterday.
'Crazy' win thrills Arteta
London - Mikel Arteta (above) said Arsenal's \"crazy\" 5-2 win at West Ham has catapulted his team back into the Premier League title race.