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Thumbs Up In Vibrant Yeoville

Forbes Africa

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June 2019

THE GREY, GLOOMY WEATHER did not dampen the excitement as South African citizens, young and old, made their way to their respective voting booths on May 8.

- Gypseenia Lion

Thumbs Up In Vibrant Yeoville

First-time voters enthusiastically posted images of their thumbs on social media after their turn polling. Twenty-five years post-apartheid, they did what voters in 1994 could not – flaunt their inky fingers to the world.

This year marked the sixth democratic elections since the fall of racial segregation.

When former President Nelson Mandela’s handcuffs were removed, a nation was freed from years of brutal laws that marginalized people of color in South Africa.

As a young ‘colored’ woman born in 1995, there’s another layer to my identity as a ‘born-free’ citizen.

I use the terms ‘colored’ and ‘born-free’ loosely, only because of the numerous sociocultural connotations attached to my identity.

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