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Big turnout at Stepping Stone’s annual Memorial Day

In honor to those who lost loved ones due to cancer.

CLOSE to 400 people attended Stepping Stone Hospice’s annual Memorial Day on September 17, which was held in the garden outside the hospice’s In-Patient Unit in New Market Park. Visitors were asked to each bring a photo, letter or small token in remembrance of a loved one to place inside a memory capsule which was later put to ground in the hospice’s Garden of Remembrance. So great was the outpouring of emotion that one memory capsule soon turned into three, all filled with heartfelt messages and tokens of love.

SAYING GOODBYE: People busy writing letters to their loved ones during the Memorial Day.

Friend and supporter of hospice, Connie Seekoei of the Alberton LewenSentrum, addressed everyone in attendance, saying that “you represent those who could not be present here today.” He added that “while we all have breath, we should never take life for granted” and said that we must never forget that “each one of us, present or passed, is a part of someone’s heart.” He also praised Stepping Stone Hospice for being “a place of unconditional love for all.”

MEMORY: One memory capsule soon turned into three – so great was the outpouring of emotion at Stepping Stone Hospice’s annual Memorial Day on September 17.

An emotional Stepping Stone CEO, Tersia Burger, said she was there as a grieving mother herself and thanked everyone for taking the time to “come and remember.”

LET IT GO: Balloons with ‘Forget me not’ seeds were set free on September 17.

The afternoon culminated in the release of 500 balloons, each filled with Forget-Me-Not seeds, in the hopes that “wherever they land, a flower will grow,” said Tersia.

GETTING READY: 500 balloons were filled with helium by workers from West Pack Lifestyle.
REMEMBERING: This is the memory capsules.
MEMORY: One memory capsule soon turned into three – so great was the outpouring of emotion at Stepping Stone Hospice’s annual Memorial Day.
BE FREE: 500 balloons went up in the sky on September 17 by people who lost loved ones due to cancer.
MEMORIAL DAY 2017: This will be placed on top of the memory capsules.

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