Every July, the country reaches for its diary and blocks out 67 minutes. It is a beautiful idea, and we love it. Mandela Day turns a single morning into a national habit of doing something good for someone else. But here is the honest truth about giving back in South Africa: 67 minutes once a year is a lovely start, and it is nowhere near enough. The need does not clock off on the 19th of July. Neither does the work.
At Wild Mongoo, giving back is not an annual event we schedule around a public holiday. It is the entire reason the workshop exists. Every single day, all 365 of them, the gifts we make put money directly into the hands of women building their own independence. So when Mandela Day comes around, we are not gearing up for our one big moment of generosity. We are simply doing on the 18th of July exactly what we did on the 17th, and exactly what we will do on the 19th.
Why 67 Minutes Is the Beginning, Not the Whole Story
Madiba gave 67 years to public life, and the 67 minutes ask us to give a sliver of that back. It works because it is small enough to say yes to. Anyone can find 67 minutes. The trouble is what happens on minute 68. The packing-shed gets tidied, the soup kitchen gets its one busy Saturday, the photos go up, and then the calendar rolls on. The women who needed steady work in June still need it in August.
We built Wild Mongoo to answer that minute-68 problem. Instead of a once-a-year burst of effort, the model is quiet and continuous. A woman in our George workshop earns a fair wage in March, in June, in the dead of winter, and over the festive season. Her income does not depend on whether the country happens to be feeling generous that week. That is the difference between a gesture and a system, and it is the version of giving back in South Africa we have chosen to build.
What Your Purchase Actually Does
We try hard to avoid the guilt-trip version of this conversation, because it is not honest to the work. When you buy something from us, you are not doing charity. You are buying a lovely, well-made, personalised gift because, let us be honest, you wanted a lovely, well-made, personalised gift. The impact is real, but it rides along with a product you would have been happy to own anyway.
Take one of our most-loved pieces as an example. A woman in the workshop sizes the design, weeds the vinyl by hand, lines up the letters, presses, cures and checks it before it ever reaches your door. That careful, slow work is paid work, and it is the same work whether the order lands in Mandela Day week or a random Tuesday in October.

Animals of Africa T-Shirt
Our Animals of Africa tee: a soft, everyday wardrobe staple covered in proudly-SA critters. Pressed by hand in George and worn everywhere, from the school run to a Garden Route game drive.
Here is what the money does once it leaves your hands. 100% of proceeds fund women's economic independence. That flows into fair wages, ongoing skills training, new equipment as the workshop grows, and the kind of quiet stability that lets a woman pay her own rent, her own school fees, and her own data bundle without asking anyone for help. One purchase does not change a life. A steady run of them, month after month, absolutely does.
Meaning You Can Wear, Carry and Gift
One of the things we love about this work is that the impact does not sit in a faraway account. It sits on a desk, on a shoulder, in a handbag, on a coffee table. Every product carries a small piece of the story with it. A notebook someone actually uses every day quietly keeps a woman in steady work the whole time it is being filled in.

Safari Notebook
A hand-illustrated Safari Notebook that is honestly too pretty to hide in a drawer. Lists, dreams, doodles and grocery runs - and it funds a woman's wage the whole time you are filling it in.
And then there are the pieces that just go everywhere you do. The tote slung over a shoulder, the bracelet you forget you are wearing, the cooler bag holding your snacks at the beach. Quiet, everyday things that happen to be funding a workshop in George while they go about their day.

Protea Cooler Bag
The Protea Cooler Bag: proudly South African, properly insulated and built for every picnic, beach day and braai. It carries your cooldrinks and a woman's livelihood in one go.

"I am not just earning money. I am learning a skill, and when my daughter asks what I do, I can show her something I made."
How to Make Your Mandela Day Last Longer Than 67 Minutes
If you want this year's Mandela Day to ripple past the morning, here are three simple ways to stretch it, none of which need a single extra hour in your week.
- Buy the gift you were going to buy anyway, with purpose behind it. Birthdays, thank-yous, corporate gifting and teacher presents happen all year. Choosing a handmade, women-made option turns ordinary spending into steady support.
- Tell one person the story. Word of mouth keeps the workshop busy. When someone admires a gift you gave, mention where it came from and what it funds.
- Think in months, not minutes. A single order is kind. A habit of choosing local, handmade and purposeful is what actually changes the maths for a woman building her independence.
That is the whole philosophy in one line: giving back in South Africa should be something you live, not something you schedule. Mandela Day is the perfect nudge to start. We are just here to help you keep it going for the other 364 days.
FAQ
What does "100% of proceeds fund women's independence" actually mean?
It means the money from sales goes back into fair wages, skills training, equipment and workshop growth, rather than being siphoned off to outside shareholders. The business exists to keep the workshop running and the women earning well, all year round.
Is Wild Mongoo a charity or a non-profit?
No. We are an impact business, not a non-profit. You buy a real, well-made product at a fair price, and the way the business is built means your purchase funds women's economic independence. It is giving back without the guilt-trip.
How is this connected to Mandela Day?
Mandela Day on 18 July celebrates 67 minutes of service. We love it, and we simply do every day what the day asks for once a year. Buying from us around Mandela Day is a natural way to make those 67 minutes stretch into year-round impact.
Where are the products made?
Everything is handmade on site in George, Western Cape, on the Garden Route, by our team of women artisans. No outsourcing, no overseas manufacturing.
What is the best way to support beyond buying a product?
Honestly, the most useful thing is sharing a product you love with someone who would also love it. Word of mouth keeps the workshop running. Tagging us when you receive a gift is a small thing that makes a real difference.






