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Africa's grandest gallop

Mail & Guardian

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July 04, 2025

Socialites are juxtaposed with the working class at the Durban July, writes Marlan Padayachee

- Marlan Padayachee

Each year on the first Saturday of July, South Africa’s most anticipated sporting and social spectacle gallops into the spotlight — a cultural jamboree known simply as the Durban July. Over time, the event has become more than just a horse race; it is a mirror of the nation's aspirations, divisions and contradictions.

At its best, the Durban July is a dazzling display of high fashion, high stakes and high society a multiracial carnival of couture, culture and class. It injects more than R150 million into the local economy and boosts jobs in fashion, hospitality and entertainment.

Rich history resides at this race track: from its past to democratic turf, the Greyville Racecourse, framed by the Warwick Triangle, Block AK and Berea, once stood as a symbol of colonial and apartheid exclusion.

Born under the shadow of Royal Ascot in the 1920s, the racecourse became a bastion of racial segregation by the 1940s.

The city's Indians - many of whom are passionate punters can today revel in the fact that one of its own, business person Sadha Naidoo, is the chair of Gold Circle Horse Racing and Gambling; he's the chief steward who will present the main race prize to the winning owner and jockey.

Yet beneath the glitz and glamour lies a more complex narrative: one of exclusion, excess and inequality. The juxtaposition is jarring - luxury marquees with people sipping champagne stand a few metres from working-class punters lining the fences. The People's Race, as it's sometimes called, still plays out on unequal terrain.

The July is also where political theatre occasionally steals the show. In 2009, the infamous “Zuma Whisky Incident” saw a glass of whisky flung at the then-president Jacob Zuma — a moment of silent protest and defiance at a highly choreographed elite gathering. It was a symbolic rupture, revealing how political tensions can spill into supposedly apolitical spaces.

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