Education & Skills Development News South Africa

Cape Classics establishes Indaba Education Fund

Cape Classics, a New York-based wine importer, has established the Indaba Education Fund (IEF), a fully accredited 501(c)(3) organisation which provides early childhood teacher training, learning materials, and educational infrastructure to young, at-risk children living in the South African Winelands.
The Indaba Education Fund has provided educational materials, as well as upgrades to the classrooms and gardens at the Lynedoch Early Learning Centre.
The Indaba Education Fund has provided educational materials, as well as upgrades to the classrooms and gardens at the Lynedoch Early Learning Centre.

A portion of all global sales of Cape Classics’ Indaba Wines brand goes towards realising this mission, but the majority of support is anticipated to be through fundraising and private donations.

“As a South African actively witnessing the challenges and outcomes of a society ravaged by poverty and unemployment, I feel compelled to not be a bystander. Raising a child under these circumstances dramatically heightens the vulnerability to the likelihood of a poor adult outcome,” says Andre Shearer, CEO and co-founder of Cape Classics.

“The IEF has been established to dramatically improve educational opportunities for the most vulnerable children living in the South African Winelands, by training and certifying teachers to world-class Montessori standards. We want to offer that to as many children as we possibly can, so they may realise their dreams and make a better life for themselves and their families.”

Indaba Montessori Institute

Since securing 501(c)(3) status, the IEF has invested in establishing the Indaba Montessori Institute housed in the Stellenbosch-based Sustainability Institute, creating a curriculum for teacher training, refurbishing the training observation classroom, and upgrading the gardens and building surrounds to meet Association Montessori Internationale (AMI) standards. The curriculum for the first AMI 0-3 teacher training class will occur in the Spring of 2017 in Stellenbosch. In addition to Cape Classic’s contribution to the IEF through Indaba Wine sales, Cape Classics has received support from its business partners, including Fedway Associates, Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits, M.S. Walker, The Heights Hospitality Group, Cherbec Advancement Foundation, as well as notable benefactors such as The Bernard G. Segal Foundation.

“There is significant opportunity to positively impact the quality of care that children, particularly at-risk children, receive,” commented Doug Shaw, senior VP, M.S. Walker. “Education initiatives, such as the Indaba Education Fund, is a means to escape poverty and poor socio-economic circumstance and step into a new life.”

Shearer said the IEF was a very serious, yet exciting undertaking in a world fraught with many seemingly insurmountable hurdles, irresolvable conflicts, and often clouded or non-existent hope.

“Early childhood development is a beacon of light in all of that darkness, and an opportunity for us to create a positive education beginning for so many,” he said. “Our long-term goal is to have an impact over 25-100 years that will truly be able to change a global paradigm. We want to offer as many children as we can, the chance to write a different, and happy ending to their stories.”

For more information, go to www.indabaeducationfund.org or www.capeclassics.com.

Let's do Biz