From the northernmost tip of South Africa to its southernmost point, twelve women are putting one foot in front of the other for a cause bigger than themselves. The group is attempting to run more than 2 160km from Musina in Limpopo to Cape Agulhas in the Western Cape in just over a week, in a bid to set a world record and raise funds for an organisation that supports underprivileged children across the country.
The attempt is being run in aid of Dynamic Women for Children, a non-profit that provides holistic support to children in need throughout South Africa.
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How the relay works
The team operates in two 12-hour shifts, with each woman running two kilometres at a time before handing over to the next. Over the course of a shift, each runner covers between 16 and 18 kilometres. The route takes them through extreme heat, demanding road conditions and gruelling sleep schedules — a test of endurance that goes well beyond the physical.
It is not the first time the organisation has undertaken a journey of this scale. Previous efforts included walks from Pretoria to Cape Town, covering more than 1 400km over three weeks to raise awareness and funds. This year, the team decided to raise the stakes considerably.
Women from every corner of the country
What makes this attempt particularly striking is who is doing it. The twelve women come from communities across South Africa, drawn together not by geography but by a shared sense of purpose.
One of the runners, a Pretoria-based participant who has completed two of the previous walks, said she could not turn down the chance to be part of the world record team. She described the experience of meeting women from all over the country as one of the highlights of the journey.
“We just came together and made it work,” she said. “Everyone had this strong calling to be part of this project. We are spread all around South Africa, and I think that makes it even more powerful because it’s not just people from one community, it’s people from all over with the same purpose to create change.”
The sentiment driving every kilometre of the run is captured simply in the team’s own words: each stride is a stand for a child who feels forgotten, and a cry for the child who deserves to heal and dream again.
A record with meaning
The team is still mid-run as South Africa watches on, with the finish line at Cape Agulhas waiting at the end of what has already been an extraordinary week. Whether or not the world record is confirmed, the women have already done something remarkable — they have turned a shared dream for South Africa’s children into kilometres of real, hard-won ground.
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Featured Image: Instagram | @dynamicwomenforchildren
