Impaired freedom is like a vehicle with slow puncture
SA celebrates Freedom Day on April 27 annually. The holiday is a commemoration of our nation’s first democratic election on that day in 1994. Born a year before that election, the day’s significance tends to reveal a dearth of pride in my spirit. I believe true freedom is yet to come.
Any and every reminder of my forefathers and mothers’ sacrifices, to be granted the opportunity to put an ‘X’ on a ballot paper, ensuring my generation and I access to opportunities to dream and live freely is quintessential.
No history book, politician or scholar should denounce the pain injected into our lineage to become the nation we call the democratic Republic of SA today.
Our people were indoctrinated into a system of capitalism where self-preservation was a form of survival instinct. A passbook was a double-edged sword that granted our elders access to work and simultaneously justified their exclusion or imprisonment. With democracy, the pass was replaced with limitless leadership positions and job titles. Suddenly the illiterate could become treasurers and managing directors based on their ability to have successfully negotiated their freedom. On the other side of the sword, inexperience resulted in the slow puncture of the nation’s fiscal position.
Corruption, maladministration and lawlessness have been brewing since the first ‘X’ marked the spot. The evidence is only accumulating as a result of the increase in a more literate youth. The freedom fight of today’s youth is but a moment of déjà vu. We have been here before. In 1985, the apartheid government declared a national state of emergency to try to “govern the ungovernable” radicals who sought to gain socioeconomic emancipation. Just as in the late 1980s, we, the youth, have no access to jobs, wealth and land.
When I asked Cebolenkosi Khumalo, University of the Witwatersrand student representative council (SRC) president, about what he views the “struggle” movement of today to be about, he echoed my sentiments on economic freedom and equal access to education being at the core of our nation’s current plight. That and the erosion of infrastructure in the country. We should also fight the trajectory of becoming a failed state. In education, our fight is to close the gap between private and public schools. In the public and private sectors, we must fight the capitalist urge of hoarding wealth for a select few.
At a glance, our fight is deemed to be against our Struggle heroes who hold positions of influence in the state. However, at its core, it is based on our desperate cry to claim tangible freedom in its entirety as should have been the case when Tata Mandela took hold of that pen in Inanda, KZN, 28 years ago. With time, more of us are privileged to be educated enough to know and do better.
For me, originally born in the now dilapidated town of Kroonstad, I am fortunate to be granted a platform to make my mark through Empowayouth, a platform that exists to give the youth access to educational, employment and entrepreneurial opportunities.
My cry is for us on this climb to freedom to do our bit to leave footpaths wide enough to allow others to eventually join us in economic Zion. Mayibuye iAfrika. Mayibuyiswe yithi!