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Audio Description

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Photo of Madalein Greyling Robin Petersen Costa Bellos and Stephan Morker
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On Thursday 19 April 2012, SAFA CEO Robin Petersen publically acknowledged the need and importance of Audio Description commentary as part of the FIFA Legacy Project in SA. Petersen committed on behalf of SAFA to assist us in making this a reality at South African football matches following the great success we had with it at the FIFA 2010 South Africa Soccer World Cup.

On the photo Council's Madalein Greyling stands with Robin Petersen, SAFA CEO, Stephan Morker, Swiss National Association of and for the Blind and Costa Bellos, seasoned Audio Description commentator.

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Race day for our Ironman

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Below is the lovely report Francois Jacobs wrote on his experience when he did the Ironman event for Council on 22 April 2012.

We are very proud of Francois for many reasons, but mostly because of the strength of character he has and has shown during this event. We understand that he did not reach the goals he has set for himself, but despite the huge setback he pushed through with almost above human determination and finished the race well before the cut-off time.

We want to say a huge THANK YOU to HumanWare who sponsored Francois and Kevin with clothes to participate in – thank you for investing in blind South Africans!

A big THANK YOU to everyone who sponsored Francois on the Do it 4 Charity website and those people who paid their donations into our bank account. We really appreciate it and I know Francois does as well.

Francois, we are proud to be associated with you. You are a true inspiration and an exceptional human being!

With a new day comes a new resolve and new beginnings, and the intense disappointment from Sunday is already fading slightly. Yes we finished well before cut-off, but I was really preparing and hoping for much better than that. Only the athletes among you will understand :-)
But we must move on, and the reason why I can do so with a happy heart is that our donor page shows that, together with the money that were paid into the SANCB's direct bank account we have made our fund-raising target! Thank you so much to everybody that did their bit to make this happen.

And for those who really want the depressing detail of what happened on Sunday, read on but beware, it's a pity party.

They say writing is a form of therapy, so I suppose I'd better start writing. Frustration, devastation, disappointment and yet, two days after the event the only outward signs I have to show for it are mildly stiff quods and sore knees. How is this possible? What went wrong?

I have been asked many times in the past whether I ever felt like quitting an Ironman race, and I could always honestly say I never did. Even this time it never crossed my mind, but the demon I faced instead was much worse. I experienced the hardship and the joy which is part of almost every Ironman experience, but this time it was in the reverse order and not at all like it should have happened.

We arrived in the Friendly City on the Thursday evening and were able to have a good night's sleep before our first sea swim in beautiful calm waters on the Friday morning. As we were driving down to the beach we had the privilege of spotting a school of about 40 dolphins - a lucky omen, we thought. Our preparations went exceedingly well, and we even managed to squeeze in a short bike ride and a run in the two days leading up to Race Day.

As Sunday drew nearer, the weather grew steadily worse. I was a little nervous because of the weather, but more than that I was excited to see whether all the hard work in terms of training and eating rather healthily would pay off. I had never trained this hard before, and all indications were such that I could realistically expect a Personal Best. My guide Kevin is a much better runner, so I knew that if I could only get faster on the run we would already be guaranteed a better finish time.

When we left the guest house for the start at 5h30AM on Sunday morning it already started drizzling, and that would set the scene for much of the day. Despite all that I felt great, and we even had time for a short warm-up swim which made a huge difference at the swim start. You might well think it's crazy to add to an already considerable 3.8km swim, but it really helps to get the blood to where it should go and to calm the pre-race nerves.
The sea was really choppy and the currents were making it difficult for the swimmers to stay on course. As Kevin and I were tethered, all I had to do was to follow him and to hope that he's not going too far off course. I felt really strong throughout the swim and I remember thinking happy thoughts of gratitude to everybody who helped me get to this point. For the last two months I wanted to get to the Virgin Active pool twice a week to try to improve on my mediocre swimming, and I couldn't have done it if it wasn't for a few fellow triathletes in the area who offered to give me a ride to the gym.

The bike leg was no less demanding since by then the wind was gradually getting stronger. The bike course consists of three laps of 60km each, and I was so pleased to find at the beginning of lap three that I was not in the same excrutiating pain as on previous years. Long bike rides on Saturdays and interval sessions on cold weekday mornings seemed to be paying off, and every time we got off the seat to stretch I could immediately feel my muscles recovering, ready for another half hour at race pace. I decided to eat plenty so I won't be exhausted by the time we start the run. If only I had paid as much attention to nutrition as I did to actual training. You don't experiment with food on race day!!!

We decided before the race already that I would hold back on the last half hour of the bike leg so I would have something left to give on the run which is by far my weakest discipline. We stuck with the plan, sort of, but I really felt I could nail this, even with winds peaking at 50 km+ that sometimes kept us back to a crawl.

We started the run without incident and I was able to maintain a steady pace hovering around 9 km/h, more or less what I'm capable of maintaining over a long distance. The spectators were awesome and I felt bad that the writing somehow came off Kevin's number so very few people were able to encourage him by name. They made us feel like we were busy breaking some world record - indescribable!
We weren't even 10km into the run when my stomach started telling me I had been eating too much, and that's when the stops started. The first time was okay, but then I started feeling nauseous and by the next aid station I decided in my infinite wisdom it's probably best to empty my stomach both ways, and after that there was no conscious decision required to keep doing it every so often.
Meanwhile we had intermittent rain showers and the temperature dropped quite a bit. Poor Kevin got very cold waiting for me while I was emptying out months of training and nutrition in the smelly stalls, and when I eventually emerged I would start shaking like a leaf from the cold outside. We didn't have any warm clothes waiting in the seconding area so all we had to keep us warm were the flimsy trisuits and the body heat that would have been generated if we were able to run at a decent pace, but of course I couldn't.

With more than 15 km to go I was reduced to a slow walk, even though my legs were still in good condition and perfectly capable of much better. As we passed an ambulance Kevin was asking me whether we needed to stop and all I could get out was a "no". In hindsight it was very selfish of me, because the longer we were out there the colder we got, and it was all because of my stubbornness, and the best I could hope for was that he would not decide to call it a day. I always knew we had plenty of time to finish, and I would finish no matter what, but I could not think of a way to keep warm while laying down until the nausea subsides. The only option for us was to trudge along, meter by meter. They say you must tackle big challenges like you would eat an elephant, bit by bit, but if I was going to take a bite of anything it would be back out in a second, so even that metaphor didn't seem to go down well. Eventually Kevin said something that made me feel I finally had something to work with. It was somewhere along the lines of: "We don't know how to solve this and to make the nausea go away, so the only thing we have some measure of control over is how long this is going to last". And that's how I managed to pick up the pace by a tiny bit to ensure we do the last 2km in twenty minutes and not forty!

At the finish line I was finished, literally. We finished well before the cut-off, but so what? I just needed to get warm and away. I remember asking to go to the medical tent, for I needed somebody to make the nausea go away. I felt like such a complete failure. How could I ask anyone to ever act as my guide again if I could throw months of training away in a matter of hours?
When I try to explain it to people they get upset, for "you at least completed something I would never dream of attempting", but when you have set yourself a goal, no matter what it is, and you really believed you could achieve it, it is heart-breaking when it doesn't happen. I will not bore you with the list of all the things that needed to be in place to get me to this relatively good form that I am in now. Suffice to say that I'm not sure I have the inner strength to go through all that again. The logistics, the money, the asking for favours, the dependencies and the Stoicism with which one has to deal with the many things that are out of your control takes more out of a person than what I have in reserve right now.

Monday was a day from hell, and I'm not even sure I managed to keep the same fixed smile in place while having to listen to members of my party explaining countless times why our finish time was so slow after an above average first half of the race.
The first time I finally saw a glimmer of light was during women's champion Natascha Badmann's interview at the awards ceremony on Monday night. Some years ago she suffered serious injury in a crash and was told that she would never race competitively again, and yet she made a conscious decision to try and try again until she came out on top. I don't know whether it was my state of vulnerability, but she sounded so authentic and believable, and intuitively I knew that she has once been where I am now.
It is an unexpected surprise to realise that even when you're at the lowest of your low, you can still relate to a champion while she is celebrating her achievement. Such is the miracle of Ironman, where the only time you say never is when you say "never give up".

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Second Chance

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Kuki Mahlango was incredibly frustrated with life. 

She became visually impaired as an adult, and sat behind closed doors, day after day. She was desperate to change her life.

And then in 2001 a gentleman from Council knocked on her door and helped her enrol for independence training. It was the start of an amazing journey of self-discovery and exploration.

If you’re a friend of SANCB, won’t you open your heart and help transform the lives of many more blind people today? Your online gift will put training and assistive devices like white canes, talking watches and calculators into the hands of someone who can’t see.

Kuki was delighted to be introduced to these devices. She went on to study computer literacy, Braille and telephony. She passed with flying colours and gained a number of distinctions. She even registered with Unisa for a B.Comm. in Human Resource Management.

It’s only the gifts from loyal friends that helped make it all possible for Kuki! But right now, we have a waiting list of people who can’t afford the cost of white canes, training or assistive devices.

Will you reach out to these people by sending a gift from the heart? Your donation – sent off right now – will help transform more lives in many wonderful ways!

Very sadly, Kuki passed away recently at the age of 55 – before completing her degree. But we can draw satisfaction from knowing that caring friends brought immense happiness and fulfilment into her life.

Her legacy will live on. And if you send your online contribution right now, you’ll help make one of her final wishes come true: to help more visually impaired people access training.

Will you help to make this possible?

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Francois did it

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Francois Jacobs, Council’s own Ironman completed the 2012 Spec-Savers Ironman event on 22 April at 22:18:25.

Francois' times for the different sections are as follows:

Swimming: 01:45:47

Cycling: 06:32:38

Running: 06:43:51

We are so proud of this totally blind athlete who completed this gruelling event – showing the world what blind people can do, and raising funds for Council in the process - even though Francois became ill during the second lap of the running. He stuck it out and even had to walk for long times, but he kept going and showed that he is truly an Ironman!

Francois, we are very proud of you and are honoured to be associated with you.

We hope you and your guide, Kevin, will have a well deserved rest in the next few days. Thank you so much for what you have done!

We want to say a huge THANK YOU to HumanWare who sponsored Francois and Kevin with clothes to participate in – thank you for investing in blind South Africans!

Also a big THANK YOU to everyone who sponsored Francois on the Do it 4 Charity website and those people who paid their donations into our bank account. We really appreciate it and I know Francois does as well.
 

Click here to see the eNews video about the whole campaign

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Thank you PUTCO

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PUTCO CSI Foundation donated R20 000 to us on 17 April.

Thank you PUTCO for the difference you make in the lives of blind and partially sighted persons.

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Off-line

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Please note that we are having difficulty with our ADSL line, and our email is not working. Please phone us on 012 452-3811.

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Happy Birthday Website

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Happy birthday to Council's accessible website. It was launched on 14 February 2011 and we have received wonderful feedback.

A happy Valentines Day to all our supporters! We LOVE you!!

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SA New Deputy Chief Justice is Blind

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Judge Zak Yacoob is Visually Impaired

The South African National Council for the Blind applauds the announcement of Judge Zak Yacoob as Acting Deputy Chief Justice of South Africa. Judge Yacoob served as Chairperson of Council from 2001 to 2009.

Judge Yacoob has been a long standing supporter, advocating for the rights and full inclusion of persons with disabilities. His life and his own disabilities have not hindered his progress to the upper echelons of the legal fraternity. The SA National Council for the Blind welcomes his appointment because we believe in empowering visually impaired people to do what they dare to dream and his achievements have been built upon a foundation of justice, hard work and determination to succeed. These are qualities espoused by many visually impaired people who sadly do not get the chance they deserve to show how they can shine.

We hope that this appointment opens the eyes of all South Africans in showing just how much success and independence visually impaired people can achieve with a little help and guidance, the right access to education, accessible skills development facilities and assistive devices.

On behalf of all the visually impaired South Africans that we, together with our member organisations serve, we wish Judge Yacoob all the best in his new appointment and we are confident that he will prove himself capable of his office.

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Francois is Council’s Iron Man

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Photo of Francois and Kevin finishing the 2011 IronMan challenge
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Francois Jacobs, the first blind athlete to complete all three events at Ironman South Africa (3.8km swim in the sea, 180km cycle and 42.2km run) in 2008, agreed to do the Ironman contest again,but this year he will do it to the Council’s benefit.

We will track his progress and report on our website, social media pages and newsletters. Please join us in supporting Francois to show the world what blind people can achieve.

Watch this space for competitions and more developments related to this event. The Spec Savers Ironman SA will take place on 22 April 2012 in Nelson Mandela Bay.

Thank you Virgin Active SA for being Francois’ official Health & Fitness Partner!

If you want to sponsor Francois, click here.

Brief background:
Francois Jacobs (41), is an enthusiastic, totally blind cyclist with many successful Argus cycle tours behind his name as well as a Comrades’ Marathon. Francois’ guide in the 2008 Ironman was Jurie Krige. This year he will compete with the assistance of, Kevin Willemse who also assisted him in 2011. Francois completed his first event in less than 14 hours – three hours before the cut-off time.

Since then Francois has trained a lot more and is receiving professional training to better his swimming techniques. Francois and Kevin are also training on open water swimming at the well-known Leisure Lakes and they will participate in the Midmar Mile event on 11 and 12 February 2012 as well.

We want to use this opportunity to thank Leisure Lakes for allowing Francois and Kevin to use their facilities free of charge to train and prepare for their swim.

“It is the most amazing feeling to have hundreds of spectators cheering you on by name. There is just no way you can give up.”  These are the words of Francois Jacobs - after his first Ironman SA event. .

Click on the file below to read the article we published in the 2008 Imfama on Francois’ first Ironman.

Join us on our Facebook page for regular updates on Francois’ preparations and to be the first to see the details of our competitions, or see the amount of money he is generating for us on the Do it for Charity website.

The photo with this article is of Francois and his guide, Kevin Willemse finishing the Ironman SA in 2011.

This is the heartfelt letter from Francois to all the people who 'like' his Facebook page in the first two weeks:

"Friends, helpers, volunteers: we salute you

You will have gathered from the number of hits on this FB page that I know a fair amount of people and they, in turn, know a lot of people. But what is not obvious from this is the caliber of some really amazing people who have helped me to get to this poin.t

I think of people such as Pam Reynecke who took on the daunting task of teaching a crazy blind guy how to swim from scratch, with a full-day follow-up swim session by Georgie Thomas, exceptional guide athletes such as Jurie Krige and now Kevin Willemse who were prepared to sacrifice a much faster personal Ironman time to enable me to complete the event. There's Allan Williamson who juggles his schedule to do neighbourhood afternoon runs with me, Theo Coetzee who always manages to find a beer stop along a social cycling route, long-time friend Vanessa Ivorson who once put us up for Ironman weekend when we couldn't afford peak season accommodation tariffs, members from Nico Sterk's training squad who are always willing to give me a ride to swim and track sessions. The list is endless. What they all had in common is that they were confronted with the unknown, and I am sure they must have had misgivings, but they all put their prejudices around blindness aside and gave of themselves to change my life completely.

If this was only my sports-related connections, imagine the length of the list if I had to elaborate on the many people who so generously give of themselves whenever they see a need.

I don't know why they do it, and neither do I think that I'm the only lucky recipient of such unselfish acts of kindness. In fact, they are all around us.
Humans are a proud species and it is not always easy to accept help, but what I am learning from all this is to accept with grace and to assist others wherever I can. It is once we have started giving that we realise that it is often more rewarding than receiving. And when you are presented with the opportunity to give, it is not about returning the favour, but rather to become part of the chain and help whoever you can by whatever means you can.

What a long-winded soapbox soliloquy, when the only thing I really wanted to say was "Thank you" - to all of you.

In case you were wondering, I am completely sober, I promise :-)

And a final thought for now: While I am grateful and humbled by some of your comments, I want to stress that this whole drive is not about me or about you, but about an organisation that also has a large volunteer contingent and which provides essential services to some less fortunate than you or me. I hope that through this campaign we can ensure the continued delivery on some crucial projects that are aimed at the upliftment and advancement of blind individuals.

Thank you very much for your comments on my wall. They are inspirational, and I appreciate every one of them.

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Closed for the festive season

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Please note that all divisions of Council closed on 15 December and will re-open on 3 January 2011.

We are all using this time to recharge our batteries so that we can serve you even better and faster in 2012!

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