For most climbers, reaching the summit of Mount Everest represents the pinnacle of personal achievement — a moment measured in altitude, endurance and survival.
But for South African mountaineer, entrepreneur and philanthropist Angela Yeung, the real meaning of the journey began only after she came back down.
One year after summiting Everest via the North Side, Yeung has officially fulfilled a deeply personal promise that transformed one of the world’s greatest physical challenges into a nationwide movement for dignity, compassion and empowerment.
For every metre climbed to Everest’s towering 8,849-metre summit, one bra was pledged to support women and girls affected by gender-based violence and vulnerable living conditions across South Africa.
Today, all 8,849 bras collected through the Impilo Collection Foundation’s #EmpowerHer campaign are being distributed across all nine provinces through shelters, women’s organisations and frontline support structures.
It is a campaign that turned a symbolic climb into thousands of acts of human restoration.

The Summit Was Only the Beginning
For Yeung, the initiative was never about setting records or celebrating personal triumph.
Instead, the Everest expedition became the foundation for something far more meaningful: restoring dignity to women who often go unseen within cycles of hardship, poverty and violence.
“The summit was never the goal. The descent is,” says Yeung. “Delivering on what we promised — that is the real summit.”
Her words capture the emotional core of the campaign — the belief that success means little unless it creates impact beyond oneself.
The idea itself was born from a simple but deeply revealing moment.
According to Yeung, someone once asked her:
“Please bring me a bra next time.”
What might seem like a small request exposed a painful reality faced by many women across South Africa — that even basic personal items tied to dignity and wellbeing are often inaccessible.
That conversation became the catalyst for a campaign that would eventually mobilise communities, volunteers and organisations nationwide.
A National Movement Rooted in Dignity
The #EmpowerHer initiative gained powerful momentum during 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence 2025, evolving into one of the country’s most visually striking awareness campaigns.
Its defining moment came at Constitution Hill, where 8,849 bras were publicly displayed beside the historic Women’s Jail.
The installation transformed a symbol historically associated with suffering and injustice into a bold expression of solidarity, dignity and collective hope.
Against the backdrop of one of South Africa’s most important historical sites, the display served as both a memorial and a movement — reminding the public that empowerment often begins with recognising overlooked human needs.
Now, as the campaign enters its final distribution phase, the bras are being delivered to 39 shelters and support organisations nationwide.
For many recipient organisations, the donations represent far more than material support.
Feedback shared by beneficiary organisations reflects the emotional and practical significance of the initiative:
“This donation is highly valued and promotes dignity and wellbeing.”
Another organisation described the need simply but powerfully:
“This is something we always need desperately.”
More Than Charity — A Broader Mission for Social Change
Beyond the immediate impact of the bra distribution campaign, the Impilo Collection Foundation continues positioning itself around long-term community empowerment and social transformation.
Through its #EmpowerHer, #EmpowerHim and #EmpowerThem initiatives, the organisation says it has positively impacted more than 100,000 lives across South Africa.
The foundation focuses on awareness campaigns, humanitarian outreach, education programmes and sustainable community engagement aimed at building safer, more compassionate communities.
As the Everest-inspired campaign concludes, the foundation is now expanding its attention toward education and early childhood development through its growing #EmpowerThem initiative.
The broader mission remains rooted in a singular belief: that meaningful social change requires both compassion and sustained action.
Redefining What It Means to Reach the Top
In a world often obsessed with personal achievement, Angela Yeung’s Everest journey offers a strikingly different definition of success.
The campaign reminds us that the most powerful summits are not always measured by how high someone climbs, but by what they choose to carry back down for others.
One year later, the message remains impossible to ignore:
The true measure of a summit is not what happens at the top of the mountain — but how that achievement is transformed into hope, dignity and impact for those still fighting battles far below it.



























