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The Arc betrayed
Mail & Guardian
|M&G 12 June 2026
The 1975 and 1976 generation’s grandchildren are educated, mobile, fluent and comfortable. They are also alienated, anxious and disconnected from the history that made their comfort possible
History repeats itself because we learn nothing from it. We disrupt and block its flow. It plays the same chord progression but in a different key. By the third generation, most people don’t notice they're dancing to the same song.
The 1976 generation did not wake up on June 16 and decide to die. They were pushed. The Afrikaner nationalist government had spent 23 years building Bantu education into a machine designed to produce labourers, not thinkers. The curriculum, language policy, underfunded schools and Afrikaans medium of instruction were all designed to make the prophecy self-fulfilling.
The students of Soweto rejected it. Not with a policy paper. With rocks, chants, their bodies and lives.
Their grandchildren, born after 1994, have never known Bantu education. Many have never set foot in a township school. They speak English better than Zulu or Sotho. They live in Midrand and Fourways. They go to Model C schools and private universities. They are the first generation to be taught outside Soweto. And the first to be co-opted into the system their grandparents tried to burn down.
Did the struggle for education and self-determination win? Or did the economic system absorb the struggle and spit it back out as a management-training programme?
To understand what was lost and what was preserved, we have to understand what they were fighting for. Bantu Education was not just bad schooling. It was ideological warfare. It was designed to produce a “Bantu” consciousness — a limited, tribal identity, racialised self-image that matched your economic role.
Maths and science were starved. History was taught as the story of white arrival and progress. The goal was to ensure that black pupils never saw themselves as capable of running a country, factory or university. They were to be hewers of wood and drawers of water.
This story is from the M&G 12 June 2026 edition of Mail & Guardian.
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