
IN CONVERSATION WITH MDUDUZI SHABALALA
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On the 27th of April is Freedom Day. But what does freedom mean in 2025? Today, we go beyond the history books—into memory, legacy, and most importantly, the minds of the youth shaping South Africa’s next chapter.
In the heart of Johannesburg, right next to the buzz of Gold Reef City, stands a space that holds our country’s most painful truths… and its most powerful triumphs: The Apartheid Museum. Opened in 2001, it’s not just a building—it’s a journey. A vivid, emotional walk through the rise and fall of apartheid, and South Africa’s path to democracy.
Inside, 21 sections unfold stories of race classification, resistance, the Soweto Uprising, the rise of Black consciousness, and the day Nelson Mandela walked free. It’s where the voices of the past whisper: ‘Never again.’"
But here’s the thing… many young South Africans today never lived through apartheid. For them, it's a story told by elders, by walls of text, by museums. So, what does Freedom Day actually mean for the youth of 2025?
Today’s freedom isn’t just about the right to vote. It’s about the right to thrive. To dream. To own your story. The new struggle is against poverty, inequality, identity erasure, and mental health stigma. Young people are asking: If apartheid ended, why do I still feel like I’m fighting to be seen?
That’s where re-liberation comes in. It’s not about resisting laws—it’s about rewriting systems. Youth today are liberating their minds, creating new cultures, building digital movements, and telling their own stories—on stages, on TikTok, in protest murals and poetry.
At the Apartheid Museum’s 30 years of democracy exhibition, you’ll see artworks once exiled—now home again. Beside them, modern pieces by young artists who never knew apartheid but feel its echoes every day. That’s re-liberation. Healing the past by owning the present.
So this Freedom Day, we remember the past to reimagine the future. Because freedom isn't static—it evolves with each generation. And right now, the youth are showing us what it really means to be free.
From the legacy of apartheid to the re-liberation of tomorrow, the story is still being written. And you—yes, you—are holding the pen.
In the heart of Johannesburg, right next to the buzz of Gold Reef City, stands a space that holds our country’s most painful truths… and its most powerful triumphs: The Apartheid Museum. Opened in 2001, it’s not just a building—it’s a journey. A vivid, emotional walk through the rise and fall of apartheid, and South Africa’s path to democracy.
Inside, 21 sections unfold stories of race classification, resistance, the Soweto Uprising, the rise of Black consciousness, and the day Nelson Mandela walked free. It’s where the voices of the past whisper: ‘Never again.’"
But here’s the thing… many young South Africans today never lived through apartheid. For them, it's a story told by elders, by walls of text, by museums. So, what does Freedom Day actually mean for the youth of 2025?
Today’s freedom isn’t just about the right to vote. It’s about the right to thrive. To dream. To own your story. The new struggle is against poverty, inequality, identity erasure, and mental health stigma. Young people are asking: If apartheid ended, why do I still feel like I’m fighting to be seen?
That’s where re-liberation comes in. It’s not about resisting laws—it’s about rewriting systems. Youth today are liberating their minds, creating new cultures, building digital movements, and telling their own stories—on stages, on TikTok, in protest murals and poetry.
At the Apartheid Museum’s 30 years of democracy exhibition, you’ll see artworks once exiled—now home again. Beside them, modern pieces by young artists who never knew apartheid but feel its echoes every day. That’s re-liberation. Healing the past by owning the present.
So this Freedom Day, we remember the past to reimagine the future. Because freedom isn't static—it evolves with each generation. And right now, the youth are showing us what it really means to be free.
From the legacy of apartheid to the re-liberation of tomorrow, the story is still being written. And you—yes, you—are holding the pen.