• Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Friday, July 3, 2026
No Result
View All Result
Church Walking With Poor
OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • Discernment of spirits with the poor
    • Establishing a dedicated Parish or Chaplaincy or Small Christian Community
    • Offering pastoral accompaniment in a campaign for social justice that the poor of St. Francis Have Initiated
    • A charity and social development project (school, clinic, income generation etc) dedicated to the pastoral care of the poor of Saint Francis
    • Accompanying the poor who are doing the project of the parliament of Francesco
    • Fifth site: Where the Bruised and hurting Church allows God (the Good Samaritan Par Excellence) to stop with them, clean the wounds and bind them
  • Ministry of Presence: Its mission strategies
    • Mission strategies to deepen Church ministry to the homeless, the poor in shanty towns and slum settlements
    • For those doing ministry to the victims of state violence (war/genocide, state repression, extrajudicial assassination) and survivors of rape and human trafficking,
    • For those doing ministry to communities harmed severely by large-scale mining project
    • For those doing ministry to communities forcibly removed from their land/their homes and victims of land grabbing
    • Our Human rights observatory on business, land grabbing and critical minerals
  • Newsletter
  • News \ Articles
  • Home
  • Discernment of spirits with the poor
    • Establishing a dedicated Parish or Chaplaincy or Small Christian Community
    • Offering pastoral accompaniment in a campaign for social justice that the poor of St. Francis Have Initiated
    • A charity and social development project (school, clinic, income generation etc) dedicated to the pastoral care of the poor of Saint Francis
    • Accompanying the poor who are doing the project of the parliament of Francesco
    • Fifth site: Where the Bruised and hurting Church allows God (the Good Samaritan Par Excellence) to stop with them, clean the wounds and bind them
  • Ministry of Presence: Its mission strategies
    • Mission strategies to deepen Church ministry to the homeless, the poor in shanty towns and slum settlements
    • For those doing ministry to the victims of state violence (war/genocide, state repression, extrajudicial assassination) and survivors of rape and human trafficking,
    • For those doing ministry to communities harmed severely by large-scale mining project
    • For those doing ministry to communities forcibly removed from their land/their homes and victims of land grabbing
    • Our Human rights observatory on business, land grabbing and critical minerals
  • Newsletter
  • News \ Articles
No Result
View All Result
Church Walking With Poor
No Result
View All Result
Home Climate Change and Green Economy: Church walking with victims of coal mining and climate activists

Waste picker’s struggle to make ends meet during lockdown

September 19, 2025
in Climate Change and Green Economy: Church walking with victims of coal mining and climate activists
Waste picker’s struggle to make ends meet during lockdown
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Kimberly Mutandiro

“The life of a waste picker is hard especially during this time of the Coronavirus,” says Elizabeth Moloi. She survives on collecting waste material which she sells for a few Rands in town.

Before the lockdown she used to sell her material making R300 every one to two weeks managing to buy a few provisions for her children.

Since the National lockdown was announced in March, the recycling firms she sold her material to were closed leaving her with no other source of income. She had managed to buy basic food before the lockdown started. But eventually the food ran out.

A single mother of three, she has gone through a lot of hardship to buy food for her family.

However, Moloi has never stopped collecting recyclables. She was determined to stock up for when recycling firms opened. She says when police saw her walking around looking for recyclable material during the lockdown, they would tell her to go home. Although she promised them, she would still find herself on the streets pushing her trolley.

“It pained me even more to see my children cry of hunger. I was better of pushing my trolley that way l knew l was doing something.”

In the streets some people would feel sorry for her and give her money or food.

Every day, she wakes up early in the morning and walks from her home in Ekuthuleni informal settlement near Kwathema to collect recyclable material. She goes to many places around the township, sometimes picking through dustbins.  She can walk as far as Springs town some 10km away pushing her trolley.

At times she passes through a market to pick thrown away vegetables to cook at home, she says.

Moloi does not earn a grant for her children. Although she used to, she says her card was blocked. She suspects that some of her relatives reported her to social workers because she used to drink beer. Although she has since stopped drinking, she says social workers have failed to help her. At 51 years of age she is still far from earning a pension.

“Maybe l am just unlucky, but l worry more about my children, sometimes they go to bed on an empty stomach.

Moloi has no protective clothing to protect herself while working. But she endures just to help put food on the table.

Some recycling firms in Springs recently opened to help waste pickers sell their material. But Moloi says the rates she and other waste pickers sell their material for have fallen per kg. They now sell for a small amount of money.

”But it’s better than nothing. If l can only manage to buy some mealie meal my children can cook porridge and eat.”

Moloi says she never received food relief which was promised to resident during the lockdown. She only hopes that the government can help her so that she can earn a grant. It would make a big difference in her children’s lives.

Next Post
Catholic Bishops Laud Corruption “whistleblowers” in South Africa, Pledge Support

Catholic Bishops Laud Corruption “whistleblowers” in South Africa, Pledge Support

Connect with us

Recommended

Catholic Church in South Africa Seeking Ecological Reparation for the coal mine workers in South Africa

10 months ago
Mining should respect the sanctity of creation and dignity of workers

Mining should respect the sanctity of creation and dignity of workers

10 months ago

SACBC Justice and Peace Commission is an agency of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference.
Its mission and role: “To proclaim the good news to the poor, to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free.” (Luke 4:18).

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Church Walking With Poor All Rights Reserved. Designed by Vasiliki Technologies.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Take Action
    • Establishing a dedicated Parish or Chaplaincy or Small Christian Community
    • Fifth site: Where the Bruised and hurting Church allows God (the Good Samaritan Par Excellence) to stop with them, clean the wounds and bind them
    • A charity and social development project (school, clinic, income generation etc) dedicated to the pastoral care of the poor of Saint Francis
    • Accompanying the poor who are doing the project of the parliament of Francesco
    • Offering pastoral accompaniment in a campaign for social justice that the poor of St. Francis Have Initiated
  • News \ Articles
  • Newsletter

© 2025 Church Walking With Poor All Rights Reserved. Designed by Vasiliki Technologies.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In