Land reform: a call to action
August 13, 2025
|Cape Argus
AS WE mark the 70th anniversary of the Freedom Charter, the soul of South Africa's struggle document must be returned to centre stage, especially its most uncompromising and emotive clause, "The Land Shall Be Shared Among Those Who Work It.”
Born out of the searing injustice of the 1913 Land Act, this clause was not poetic idealism; it was a war cry, a confrontation with a colonial and apartheid order that uprooted, dispossessed, and dismantled the African peasantry and agrarian enterprise.
The 1913 Natives Land Act was the legal scalpel that excised millions of Africans from their ancestral land, amputating them from their economic base and cultural lifeblood. It barred Africans from owning land in over 87% of South Africa and confined them to impoverished reserves, setting in motion a cycle of economic dependency, landlessness, and systemic poverty. This legislative monstrosity didn't merely displace Africans; it decimated the foundations of independent African agriculture, fragmenting black self-sufficiency and creating a vast, disenfranchised class of landless labourers.
The demand for land was, therefore, not an abstract constitutional matter; it was the nerve centre of the liberation struggle. From the days of the ANC’s founding in 1912 through to the Defiance Campaign, the armed struggle, and the dawn of democracy in 1994, the land question animated every revolutionary syllable. Yet, three decades after democracy, we are compelled to ask, has this revolutionary demand been met with revolutionary action?
The democratic state attempted a course correction through policy, most notably the 1997 White Paper on South African Land Policy, which articulated three pillars: land redistribution, tenure reform, and land restitution. The policy framework acknowledged that land reform was a moral, social, and economic imperative, seeking to reverse apartheid's legacy, reduce rural poverty, and broaden access to land for black South Africans.
There must be an honest and sober appreciation of the effort and inten-
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