1 / 12

Letlhafula Celebration

Letlhafula Celebration. Theme: “ Re leboga Modimo go bo o re file Pula le thobo e ntle mono ngwaga ”. Hon Minister of Minerals, Energy and Water Resources, Dr P.H.K. Kedikilwe. Introduction.

haruki
Download Presentation

Letlhafula Celebration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Letlhafula Celebration Theme: “Re leboga Modimo go bo o re file Pula le thobo e ntle mono ngwaga”. Hon Minister of Minerals, Energy and Water Resources, Dr P.H.K. Kedikilwe

  2. Introduction • Celebration resonates well with God’s word which commands us to come before him and give him thanks in order to be blessed. • Psalm 95:2 “Let us come before him with thanksgiving and extol him with music and song.” • The occasion to appreciate our rich culture and value of our traditional food.

  3. Letlhafula Concept • Department of Water Affairs initiated the celebration of Letlhafula in May 2006. This is the 3rd celebration. • The concept is a brainchild of the Prayer Volunteer Team, which sold the initiative to management. • The celebration is a symbol of worship and appreciation to God for providing good rains that bolstered bumper harvests. (Links with culture of praying for rain and thanking God thereafter).

  4. Concept cont. • Good rains provide water -- a great gift to us and all other forms of life on earth. • Water is life and it touches all the facets of human existence and development. • Significant improvement in dam water levels following the recent good rains (latest levels).

  5. Vision 2016 • The celebration initiated in answer to Vision 2016’s articulation of economic diversification. • It calls for the country to improve food security, rural employment and incomes under semi-arid environment like ours. • Efficient use of human resources and management skills required for self sufficiency in food and manufactured products.

  6. Vision 2016 cont. • Letlhafula initiated to encourage employees and friends to embark on farming with a view to minimize reliance on diamond revenues and imported food products. • To this end, this will improve quality of life by providing healthy food.

  7. Hectarage ploughed countrywide • 122 963 hectares—2007/08 season. • 273 136 hectares—2008/09 season measured as at 05/05/09. • Government so far spent P70 million to pay farmers who used ISPAAD.

  8. Value of traditional food • Nutritionally good for health—higher levels of vitamins, minerals etc. • Have no fats. • Revive culture of eating indigenous food.

  9. Initiatives • Commend DWA for several initiatives including Dikgosi who mediate and the Letlhafula Concept. • Staff resourcefulness, innovation and determination promotes a highly motivated workforce and team work. • Occasion a sign of caring for staff health and wellness.

  10. Theme • This is a Godly celebration, hence a theme based on Genesis 8:22 that reads: “For as long as earth lasts, planting and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never stop”. • The times of harvesting were ordained by God in the beginning and it gives us every reason to celebrate and thank him.

  11. Water Conservation • Should care for water and all other creations as we thrive in its abundances. • Be good stewards so that the earth and its creatures does not thirst. • The Lord Jesus thirst on the cross so that we may have all things in abundance including water.

  12. Conservation cont. • Protect water resources from pollution. • Use water wisely and sparingly. • Strive to be a water conservation conscious society.

More Related