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Freedom Charter at 70: tapestry of hope
Post
|June 25, 2025
PECKING ORDER
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AS SOUTH Africa this Thursday marks the 70th anniversary of the Freedom Charter — adopted on June 26, 1955, in a defiant gathering in Kliptown, Soweto —it is timely to interrogate its legacy not with nostalgic reverence, but with the sharp lens of critique.
The Freedom Charter was born of a radical imagination. The activists gathered there dared to envision a non-racial, non-sexist, democratic, prosperous and egalitarian country.
It remains the cornerstone of our nation’s constitutional democracy and its rights-based ethos. Yet, this document, hailed as a beacon of liberation, casts a long shadow over a society fractured by enduring inequalities, where the widening gap between rich and poor mocks the charter’s lofty promises.
To reflect on this milestone is to confront the paradox of a nation that celebrates its democratic triumphs, while wrestling with the reality of unfulfilled aspirations.
The Freedom Charter was no mere political manifesto. It was a subversive act of collective dreaming, woven from the aspirations of the ANC, South African Indian Congress, Coloured People’s Congress and Congress of Democrats.
South Africans of Indian descent, in whose veins ran a century of resistance against colonial indignities from indenture to segregation, were integral to this tapestry.
Activists like Swaminathan Gounden, a worker from Durban’s industrial heart of Jacobs, embodied the courage of the marginalised. At great peril, Gounden slipped through the apartheid state’s surveillance to attend the Kliptown gathering, a journey fraught with the risk of arrest or worse.
His return to Faulks shoe factory was met with swift retribution — dismissal for daring to dream of a world where “the people shall govern”.
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