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SA, look to the Freedom Charter

Mail & Guardian

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July 11, 2025

Adopted in 1955, the Charter's vision remains as relevant to the country today as it was 70 years ago

- Marlan Padayachee

In the dusty heart of Kliptown on the outskirts of apartheid-era Johannesburg, a bold and unprecedented gathering took place on 26 June 1955 — an audacious act of defiance that would echo through the decades of struggle to come.

Under threat of state surveillance and repression, thousands of delegates assembled to give birth to a revolutionary vision: the Freedom Charter a political blueprint that challenged colonial domination and apartheid authoritarianism.

Seventy years on, as South Africa reflects on the charter's legacy, the question is: has the dream been deferred? Is the charter a moral compass that can guide the country away from corruption, inequality and political disillusionment and back to our better selves?

This year's commemorations unfold under a dark cloud - a public fallout between the KwaZulu-Natal police commissioner and the police minister over alleged ties to criminal networks and tenderpreneurs.

Generations of activists, cadres and civic leaders placed their hopes in the Freedom Charter, seeing in it a road map to liberation. But even as it was being drafted, apartheid's machinery was already erasing the very communities that embodied those ideals.

The Group Areas Act (7 July 1950): Apartheid was in full stride, enforcing the Act, one of its most brutal instruments. This law forcibly removed hundreds of thousands of black, Indian, coloured and Chinese South Africans from inner-city areas of Johannesburg such as Fordsburg, Pageview and Vrededorp.

As activists in Kliptown imagined a nonracial democracy, trucks and trailers loaded with furniture and frightened families rolled down the streets. They were carted off to racially zoned outposts - Lenasia for Indians, Eldorado Park for coloureds, Soweto for Africans grim apartheid gulags far from the economic and cultural lifeblood of the city.

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