About

Our Mission

We work in South Africa with minorities and the most vulnerable among us. We work to break the cycle of poverty in South Africa, addressing six of the UN Sustainable Development Goals by empowering individuals and communities with the infrastructure, education, and sustainable opportunities they need to build a dignified and self-sufficient future. 
  
We uplift vulnerable communities, regardless of race, through practical, long-term solutions that improve daily living conditions, expand access to quality education, and create pathways to employment and entrepreneurship. As a Non-BBBEE organization, we work independently of South Africa’s BBBEE framework, ensuring support reaches those who are often overlooked or excluded from formal systems.
By investing in safer homes, improved ablution facilities, fully equipped kitchens, Early Childhood Development programs, essential school resources, vocational training, and income-generating community projects such as training kitchens, food gardens, and innovative micro-enterprises, we help communities become resilient and self-reliant.
In partnership with generous supporters from Switzerland, Europe, and around the world, We4SA is committed to transforming lives: One person, one community, one future at a time.   
 
We4SA was established after South Africans with businesses in the country requested a local NPC through which they could donate directly to Swiss4Afrika’s mission, supporting efforts to fight current inequalities affecting minorities without the limitations imposed by BBBEE requirements.

Supporters and Strategic Mission Partners

UN Sustainable
Development Goals

Our Beliefs

Why Choose us

Why We Care

The founding team of We4SA has a long-standing connection to South Africa. We are aware of the difficulties that many people are currently experiencing. We also believe that South Africa has great potential.

We are aware that there are numerous minority non-profit organisations operating within local communities that are facing significant challenges due to a lack of resources.

These non-profit organisations unfortunately find themselves in a position where they are unable to access funding due to the Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) of the South African government

This policy which aims to facilitate broader participation in the economy by black people makes it challenging for minority group orphanages, homeless shelters and old age homes to apply for grants or social aid from the South African government, big South African-based corporates and even from locally registered Non-Profit foundations.

And yet they are the only hope for members of their communities.

By helping these local non-profit organisations to be more robust and self-sufficient, we believe they can make a real difference where it matters most.