Imtiaz Sooliman, a medical doctor practising in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, visited a Shaikh in Istanbul in 1992. The Sufi teacher gave him a message that would dramatically change the lives of countless people. ‘To my absolute astonishment he told me I would help people for the rest of my life. He then instructed me to form a humanitarian organisation called the “Gift of the Givers”, and repeated the phrase “the best among people are those who benefit mankind”.’
Almost 30 years later Gift of the Givers, Africa’s largest humanitarian and disaster agency, has a reputation for speedy responses to floods, war, famine, fires, tsunamis, kidnapping and earthquakes. Well known for their interventions in South African and international disasters, teams of volunteers have undertaken missions to places such as Bosnia, Palestine, Japan, Haiti, Indonesia, Malawi and Mozambique. In the last few years they have turned their attention to the poorest South Africans - they have put up hospitals, run clinics, dug wells, drilled boreholes, built houses, offered scholarships and provided shelter, food and psychological succour to millions.
Originally published in 2014, the book has been brought up to date to continue the extraordinary tale of an organisation that has become a South African legend – the first to intervene in so many devastating situations and bring hope to those who have lost everything. Gift of the Givers’ reputation for direct, honest and non-partisan solution-finding has become a beacon of hope in South Africa.
SHAFIQ MORTON is an award-winning Cape Town-based photo-journalist, editor, surfer, and radio-TV presenter with decades’ experience.
He has covered South African stories such as the anti-apartheid campaign, the release of Nelson Mandela, the 1994 elections, and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. He has been on assignment in places such as Palestine, Libya, Somalia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Jordan, Namibia, and Niger.
In 2008 he won the National Vodacom Award in the community media section and the regional award in 2010.
One of the best charities when it comes to works done and results achieved. Unfortunately we now have Extremist Zionist elements in our Jewish communities branding the good doctor’s work as hamas because they also offered aid in Gaza. They have no facts to prove their screeching, but are just throwing accusations because the Doctor opposes what is going on in Gaza. It is like the one idiot on a radio station, a well-known journalist, accusing News24 of being AntiSemetic. It has come to the point where only the Zionist Extremists believe what they say, and the rest of us, including MANY fine Jews of Conscience like SAJFP and normal people just say ‘Yeah whatever,’ ignore their Hasbra and carry on with our lives. (I won’t say ‘Bad Hasbra,’ as that is the name of a podcast produced by a group of heroic Jewish people.) I won’t pretend it is the most interesting book, but, as a non-Muslim, even if I am to call myself a Christian, the work done by Doctor Sooliman’s charity and the effort he gives is so much mor passionate and compassionate and practical than many other charities. A worthwhile read.
The work of The Gift of the Givers is awe-inspiring. While the stories captivated me, the writing made me want to stop reading on the second page. Had it not been for the gravity of the work, I would not have finished the book.
I would give the content 5/5, but I would give the writing 1/5.
Fantastic review of one of the best Relief Organizations in Africa. It is truly inspiring. Writing could have been a bit better - it's what has prevented the 5th star.
What an amazing man and organization - I had no idea of the extent of the work that they do, responding to crises across the world, but also making a difference in the lives of ordinary South Africans. Their compassion and humility are amazing. I stand in awe!
A beautifully captured catalogue of the sterling work done by Imtiaz Sooliman, founder of the Waqful Waqifeen “Gift of the Givers”. A proudly South African international relief organisation, a gift to humanity with no boundaries!
The rating has more to do with the work of Gift of the Givers rather than the way the book is written. The writing was a bit monotonous and unimaginative however the story is quite admirable.
Each chapter explains a difference aid mission but skims over the details and would've preferred a bit more detail. But an easy read and interesting. Inspiring and saddening at the same time