This Way Up South Africa

Introducing This Way Up: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Change

1 min · 9. mars 2026
episode Introducing This Way Up: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Change cover

Beskrivelse

Welcome to This Way Up, the podcast that celebrates ordinary South Africans doing extraordinary things. Each episode reveals the stories of people who choose action over despair, whether feeding the hungry, clearing rivers or creating mobile clinics. Through these conversations, listeners discover what it takes to make a difference and find their own sense of hope and agency.

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Alle episoder

9 Episoder

episode We Are Who We’ve Been Waiting For: Nomsa Mazwai on Courage, Community and Change cover

We Are Who We’ve Been Waiting For: Nomsa Mazwai on Courage, Community and Change

In this episode, we talk to Nomsa Mazwai, an economist, musician, social entrepreneur and Fulbright scholar whose work sits at the intersection of community development, women's safety and creative expression. From pioneering Soweto Night Out – an innovative tourism initiative that creates safer public spaces while generating local economic opportunities – to developing bold new social enterprise ideas and recording music inspired by her own journey of resilience, Nomsa combines intellectual rigour with a deep commitment to service. In this candid conversation, she reflects on entrepreneurship, unemployment, faith, mental health, and the determination required to keep building solutions in the face of seemingly impossible challenges.

I går33 min
episode From Despair to Action: Chantal's River Rescue cover

From Despair to Action: Chantal's River Rescue

In this episode, we talk to Chantal Nativel, who is helping transform the fight against river pollution in Johannesburg into something hopeful, practical and deeply community-driven. Motivated by her love of nature and concern for the environment, she launched a grassroots river cleanup initiative that brought together local residents, volunteers and businesses around a shared purpose. What began on International Rivers Day quickly grew into something far bigger than a once-off cleanup. By focusing on collaboration, long-term thinking and community involvement, Chantal is helping build a movement around the restoration of Johannesburg’s rivers. Alongside environmental groups, experts and ordinary citizens, she is showing how collective action can reconnect people to the natural spaces running through the city. The work is demanding, but the energy around it is contagious. Chantal’s story is a reminder that change does not always begin with large institutions or massive budgets. Sometimes it begins with one person deciding to care publicly and consistently enough that others start showing up too.

11. mai 202617 min