
The youth are not lost: The untold truth behind June 16, 1976
Obbey Mabena says today's youth are misjudged; they have been left in the dark by those who survived the struggle.
Silence from elders about what happened in exile has left young people without a clear understanding of their inheritance.
Youth Day must be about truth-telling, not just remembering the past, but confronting what was never finished.
'We are celebrating the youth that fought for us years ago when we didn't have opportunities to education as South Africans,' says Portia Mokoena, a university student reflecting on the meaning of Youth Day.
Someone had to die; blood had to be spilt so that we have what we have today.
It's a powerful reminder that for her, 16 June is not just about the past. It is a day that still resonates with the present, a mirror held up to what has changed, and what has not.
City Press archives
Bongiwe Simelane, another young South African, puts it simply, 'It was never easy. It's still not easy now. And it will never be easy. But if we keep pushing through as a unit, we can change things.'
She speaks with clarity and urgency. Despite having some freedoms, she believes young people today are scattered, disillusioned and struggling to unify in the same way the youth of 1976 did. 'They had a clear cause. They stood together. We need that now more than ever.'
Then there is the question of relevance. What good is education if it does not translate to employment? Ridwaan Patel asks a pointed question,
What will you do by studying HR? Where do you go to work with it?
Ridwaan Patel
His frustration is sharp. 'Everyone pushes university, but what about artisans? We need plumbers, electricians and builders. Not everyone has to be a doctor or lawyer.'
Their comments come at a time when the meaning of Youth Day is once again under scrutiny. Almost 50 years after schoolchildren marched through the streets of Soweto demanding the right to be taught in their own language, many young South Africans feel they are still waiting for the freedom that was promised to them.
For Obbey Mabena, one of the young people who went into exile in 1976, the problem is not that today's youth are lost, it is that they have not been told the truth.
'When I left for exile, I left on behalf of our people,' says Mabena. 'That being the case, on our return, it was incumbent on us to go back to the people and explain to them what happened after we had left and how we came to be where we were.'
That being the case, on our return, it was incumbent on us to go back to the people and explain to them what happened after we had left and how we came to be where we were.
But he says that reckoning never really happened.
We are very economical with exactly what happened. When we tell our story, we have to tell it once and for all. It was not all hunky-dory. It was very tough.
Without that full account, Mabena argues, it becomes easy to misjudge today's youth.
'You hear irresponsible people saying, 'Ah, the youth of today is useless'. Nothing could be more nonsensical. They are our own offspring. If they are useless, it means we are useless because we failed to make them useful.'
Mabena reflects on how deeply the apartheid system sabotaged education, using language not to empower, but to control. The introduction of Afrikaans as a medium of instruction was not the beginning, he says, but part of a broader strategy to deny black children access to the kind of knowledge that builds power.
'Under Bantu Education, even if you got straight A's in every subject, if you failed your mother tongue, you were forced to repeat the year. That's how much emphasis they placed on their system. But at the time, we didn't see it. We thought they were making us stupid on purpose. We didn't appreciate the value of mother tongue instruction because we were brainwashed into thinking that English is dignity.'
The picture painted by both the youth and veterans like Mabena is one of broken continuity, a country still caught between memory and progress. Youth Day has become a symbol of victory, but also of unfulfilled promises. Access to quality education, funding, safety and dignity remains out of reach for too many.
And yet, the spirit of the '76 generation lingers, not in perfect unity or clarity, but in the small acts of questioning and resistance taking place every day.
From Fees Must Fall to campaigns against gender-based violence, unemployment and inequality, South Africa's youth are still fighting. Their weapons are different, such as social media, protest, art and dialogue, but their demands echo the same call for justice. As Mabena puts it,
'We must tell our people what happened. That will help our youth not to be useless because they'll be moving from a very concrete base of what happened.'
Youth Day is not about nostalgia. It is a warning and a responsibility. As long as truth remains withheld and dignity delayed, South Africa's young people will continue to ask and act in search of something better.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
an hour ago
- Wall Street Journal
Oil Workers, Snagged in a Dispute Over a Dictator's Son's Yacht, Are Freed After Two Years
Equatorial Guinea's dictator freed two South African oil workers his regime had imprisoned for years in apparent retaliation for an unrelated legal dispute involving the ruling family's superyacht and vacation homes. President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, in power in the tiny Central African country since 1979, included Frederik Potgieter, 55, and Peter Huxham, 56, among 476 prisoners he pardoned for his birthday this month, according to a social-media message by the president's son.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump gripes he won't get Nobel Peace Prize 'no matter what‘ as global conflicts persist
President Trump on Friday celebrated a newly announced deal to end the conflict between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo but lamented that he may not win a Nobel Peace Prize for his work in the deal, or for other international agreements he helped negotiate in office. The State Department announced Wednesday that Rwanda and Congo will sign a deal to end fighting in eastern Congo, where rebels that Congo has accused Rwanda of backing have seized strategic cities since January. The United States was brought in to assist the peace talks at the request of Congo President Felix Tshekedi. 'This is a Great Day for Africa and, quite frankly, a Great Day for the World,' Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social, calling the agreement 'a wonderful Treaty.' But he also griped that he believed he may not receive accolades for the deal, nor for a host of other conflicts that the United States has helped resolve. 'I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize for this, I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize for stopping the War between India and Pakistan, I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize for stopping the War between Serbia and Kosovo,' he wrote, also naming conflicts in North Africa and the Middle East. Trump's post came just hours after Pakistan announced that it would nominate him for the Peace Prize. India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire in May after several days of intense rocket fire between the two countries, an agreement that Trump said he played a significant role in. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has sought to downplay Trump's claims. Trump also said repeatedly on the campaign trail that he should be awarded the prize, which former President Obama won in 2009. Pakistan's nomination of Trump marks his fifth nomination. The pool of people who can submit nominations for the award is extensive, including university professors and members of national assemblies such as Congress. Michael Jackson and the international soccer federation FIFA have also been nominated in the past. 'No, I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize no matter what I do, including Russia/Ukraine, and Israel/Iran, whatever those outcomes may be, but the people know, and that's all that matters to me!' Trump added. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


News24
8 hours ago
- News24
Court orders dissolution of Ngwathe Municipality amid service delivery collapse
The Free State High Court has ordered the dissolution of the Ngwathe Local Municipality, citing gross failures in fulfilling its constitutional, legislative and regulatory responsibilities toward residents in towns such as Parys, Heilbron, Koppies and Vredefort, among others. The ruling follows a case brought by AfriForum, supported by the Save Ngwathe community group. The parties successfully acquired an interdict compelling the Free State provincial government to immediately intervene in the municipality's affairs. Ngwathe becomes the second municipality in the Free State to be placed under administration. Last month, Matjhabeng Local Municipality was placed under administration following the province's MEC for Cooperative Governance, Traditional Affairs and Human Settlements, Saki Mokoena, finally invoking Section 139 of the Constitution, which outlines the process for provincial intervention in municipalities unable to fulfill its executive obligations. READ | Matjhabeng Municipality finally under administration as province moves to address governance collapse Mokoena's actions followed a Bloemfontein High Court judgment, handed down on 23 October 2024, which found financial mismanagement, collapsing infrastructure and poor service delivery. Ngwathe residents allegedly suffered for years According to court papers which AfriForum submitted, pertaining to Ngwathe, the lobby group said residents had suffered for years under dire conditions - including persistent water shortages, raw sewage flowing in the streets, crumbling infrastructure and widespread financial mismanagement. The municipality owes more than R1 billion to Eskom and Rand Water. In delivering judgment on Friday, Judge Johannes Daffue described the municipality and its council as 'dysfunctional' and criticised the provincial government for its inaction. He said the case warranted judicial oversight, calling it a 'suitable case where the court should play the role of a watchdog'. The court order instructed Free State Premier Maqueen Letsoha-Mathae and her executive council to: Dissolve the municipal council and appoint an administrator; Develop and implement a recovery plan to restore service delivery and ensure financial stability; Approve a temporary budget and revenue measures to support the recovery plan; and Submit written progress reports to the court every three months under oath. The municipality and eight other respondents, including the premier, were also ordered to pay AfriForum's legal costs. The judgment comes after a series of public protests in 2024, sparked by water cuts, potholes as well as a catastrophic 11% Blue Drop water quality score. The crisis worsened when Free State's Provincial Treasury rejected Ngwathe's R2.099 billion draft budget for 2025/26, citing a falsified surplus based on an unrealistic 100% collection rate. AfriForum's Alta Pretorius called the ruling a 'massive victory' for long-suffering residents. Pretorius said: This not only brings justice, but legal grounds for real intervention. The government can no longer look away. The DA's Carina Serfontein welcomed the judgment, saying it confirmed what residents had known for years. 'We will closely track the premier's progress reports and take further action, if necessary,' she said. The mayor of Ngwathe, Victoria De-Beer Mthombeni, acknowledged the ruling, stating: 'The executive mayor respects the judgment of the Bloemfontein High Court and is studying the judgment in detail and will communicate in due course on the processes going forward.'