“Angels Against Crime” – Turning Tragedy into Support for Anti-Crime Efforts
Monday, January 7th, 2008My sister gave me an ornament for Christmas this year – an angel made from a Sprite can. I thought it was very cute…and then I read the attached card and saw what a thoughtful gift it was for me given my interest in business support for causes globally. The front of the card had a stylized drawing of the angel with the words “angels with attitude” along the edges. Inside, it said that the angel was made from a recycled soda can by Zulu teenagers orphaned due to the AIDS epidemic as an extra-mural youth entrepreneurism activity. “Purchasing an angel will impact directly on the students , assisting them to feed, clothe, and educate themselves and at the same time giving them a sense of pride and selfworth.”
Even after reading the hangtag, I still had no idea what the angel REALLY symbolized. When I went to the Angels Against Crime website (http://angelsagainstcrime.co.za/background.htm), I learned more about the tragic story behind the 25 year old Sutton family’s Zulu handicrafts business, Ilala Weavers, support of these angels. Jeremy, one of two sons involved in the family business was murdered on the job in 2000. “Jeremy was working with a group of handcrafters on a Beaded Angel, which was to be sold as a Christmas decoration. On the 30th August 2000, he went on a field trip into the Maputoland region of Kwa-Zulu Natal to meet with a group of crafters, to collect work and pay them for it. He hadn’t long been there, when two men approached him, one pulled out a gun and cold bloodily, in front of twenty people, shot him through the heart and took the money. The murderers have since been taken into custody and are serving two life sentences each.
The family decided to dedicate the Angel, which because of his work on it, had become known as Jeremy’s Angel, as a symbol against crime and of peace, and to use the proceeds from the sale of the Angels to curtail crime and to assist crime victims, by supporting organisations and projects which do this.”
The mission of Angels Against Crime is:” To promote peace and goodwill, create awareness and reduce crime by supporting education, training and skills development projects that create sustainable income generation and improved standards of living for the youth of South Africa.” (http://angelsagainstcrime.co.za/index.htm) The four goals of the project are as follows. “To create employment for the rural people of Northern Kwa-Zulu Natal. To Promote peace and goodwill. To assist campaigns and projects aimed at curtailing crime in South Africa. To assist those who have become victims of crime and violence.”
The website also provides consumer education on safe travel tips for South Africa. The Ilala Weavers business website, http://www.ilala.co.za/, provides a link to the Angels Against Crime website, and offers the beaded and recycled can angels for sale through their website, as well.




