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Learners show leadership and service on Mandela Day

St Dominics Newcastle learners collected and donated soup ingredients for Mandela Day

This term, St Dominic’s Newcastle proudly embraced the spirit of Mandela Day with a heartfelt outreach led by our Men of Honour; a group committed to shaping responsible young men through service, respect, and character.

The initiative, which focused on collecting and preparing ingredients for soup, tied in beautifully with our school-wide theme of responsibility and meaningful community contribution.

While many associate Mandela Day with the act of serving soup directly, this year our approach was both sustainable and far-reaching.

Instead of preparing soup on campus, our learners worked together to collect, clean, peel, chop, and package fresh ingredients for donation.

Each register class was assigned specific items; from vegetables and soup mix to stock and canned goods, and the response from families was overwhelming.

All this unfolded while the school simultaneously hosted our Interhouse Football Day, showing once again how our learners can balance energy and empathy in equal measure.

Sustainable service, real impact

The sheer volume of ingredients collected inspired a shift in our approach.

Rather than prepare a single meal, we opted to donate all the ingredients in bulk to the neighbouring Catholic Church, which runs a weekly Thursday feeding scheme for the Newcastle community.

This way, the frozen ingredients could be used across multiple weeks, extending the impact far beyond a single event.

The church received the donation with immense gratitude and shared that the soup ingredients will nourish many individuals in the weeks to come.

Led with heart: the Men of Honour in action

The Men of Honour, originally founded to teach dinner etiquette to matric learners, has grown into something far deeper.

Now, it focuses on guiding boys through the principles of respect, maturity, and responsibility; both in how they interact with others and how they give back to the world.

From learning how to resolve conflict maturely to building lifelong bonds and stepping up in service, the club continues to evolve with purpose. The Mandela Day’s soup drive was a proud reflection of these values in action.

Staff, learners across all grades, our Power Circle, and Leo’s Club also contributed to the day’s success, proving that when a school community comes together, the results are powerful and lasting.

A gentle reminder of what it means to serve

“As we reflect on this initiative, we celebrate not just the act of giving, but the intention behind it. Our learners showed up not just with ingredients but with heart.”

Their commitment is a shining example of the type of leaders we aim to nurture, those who know that true strength lies in service.

St Dominic’s Newcastle is incredibly proud of the Men of Honour and everyone who helped turn this Mandela Day into a moment of real impact, one that will continue to feed, uplift, and inspire.



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Zianne Leibrandt

Since joining the Newcastle Advertiser in 2015, Zianne Leibrandt has built a reputation for fair, balanced reporting and remaining calm under pressure. She believes every day brings a new adventure and an opportunity to share the stories that matter most.

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