Thuli Madonsela Foundation

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Thuli Madonsela Foundation

Thuli Madonsela Foundation

@ThumaFoundation

Thuli Madonsela Foundation Aka ThuMa Foundation Deepening and Defending Democracy

South Africa Beigetreten Ocak 2017
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
We have been speaking about June 16, children marched and died not over corruption, but over a deliberate state system designed to deny them a future. To reduce today's inequality purely to post-1994 governance failures is to choose amnesia over analysis. Why does your history of South Africa conveniently begin the moment Black people got the vote? The wounds that Hector Pieterson's generation bled for didn't heal in 1994. They became the soil democracy was planted in, soil that was already depleted by centuries of deliberate dispossession. Accountability for corruption is valid and necessary. But it cannot be weaponised to erase the structural legacy that preceded it.
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Angry citizen
Angry citizen@Angryci12111663·
@ThumaFoundation How different would this state of inequality been if the government had not stolen the country blind through overpriced corrupt practices and allowed market related practices instead of BEE enabled preferential income for ANC connected thieves.
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
By most measures of economic inequality, including the Gini coefficient, in which South Africa consistently ranks among the world's worst, political democratisation has not produced proportional redistributive transformation. The paradox this produces is among the most challenging in contemporary democratic theory: a society of constitutionally equal citizens living materially stratified lives, where access to wealth, land, quality healthcare, and economic opportunity remains distributed along fault lines that apartheid engineered and democracy has insufficiently disrupted. Political freedom is not a trivial achievement but freedom that cannot be eaten, that cannot pay school fees, that cannot secure housing, is freedom experienced as a cruel abstraction by those on the wrong side of the inequality curve. The unfinished work of South African democracy is, in large measure, economic. #RememberReflectRebuild #DemocracyWorksForAll
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Day 15 of #16DaysToRemember arrives at the threshold of the campaign's conclusion with a summoning that is both intimate and historic. The legacy of the class of 1976 is democracy, fragile, contested, structurally incomplete, but real, and purchased at a price that cannot be understated. The legacy of the class of 2026 is still being written in every vote cast or withheld, every act of civic engagement or withdrawal, every instance of accountability demanded or corruption tolerated, every young South African who chooses service over spectacle and participation over passivity. The students of Soweto did not march so that future generations could simply remember them. They marched so that future generations could build on what they began. Their question was: how do we win freedom? Our question is the one that will determine what history says about this generation: What will we do with the South Africa they gave us? The answer is not given in speeches or commemorations. It is given in lives. #16DaysToRemember #YouthBuildSA #RememberReflectRebuild #Soweto50YearsLater
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Hope is a feeling of optimism that descends upon individuals when circumstances are sufficiently encouraging. It is an action. It is the deliberate choice to invest energy and commitment in a future that does not yet exist, on the basis of a conviction that human effort can produce outcomes different from those that present conditions predict. This understanding of hope as active rather than passive, as chosen rather than received, was precisely the epistemological orientation of the 1976 generation. They did not wait for conditions to become hopeful before they acted. They acted, and in acting, they created the conditions for hope that subsequent generations inherited. The generation of 2026 faces a South Africa in which hopelessness is an understandable response to demonstrable failures. Day 15 asks whether this generation will choose the harder, more historically significant path: not the path of waiting, but the path of building. #RememberReflectRebuild #16DaysToRemember
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Courage, the students of Soweto demonstrated with devastating clarity, is contagious. When one person stands up against a system that depends for its authority on the assumption that no one will, they do not simply act, they alter the calculus of possibility for everyone around them. They make visible what had previously seemed inconceivable. The march of June 16 began with students who had decided, individually and collectively, that the cost of silence exceeded the cost of confrontation. As they marched, their numbers grew because courage, once made visible, gives others permission to discover it in themselves. Day 15 of #16DaysToRemember carries this lesson forward into a present that is saturated with reasons for passivity and cynicism, and insists: the same dynamic operates today. The young South African who chooses accountability over apathy, service over self-interest, and participation over resignation is not acting alone. They are altering the civic landscape for everyone who witnesses that choice. #YouthBuildSA #Soweto50YearsLater
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
There is a concept in democratic theory sometimes called the "obligations of inheritance" that holds that generations who benefit from the sacrifices of their predecessors incur genuine moral obligations to those predecessors, even though the predecessors are no longer present to enforce them. This concept is not merely abstract. It has concrete application to the situation of South Africa's 2026 generation. The rights enshrined in the Constitution, the institutions established by the democratic transition, the freedoms exercised daily without acknowledgement, these exist because specific people, many of them young, chose sacrifice over safety at a moment when safety was the vastly more rational option. Day 15 of #16DaysToRemember asks this generation to take seriously the obligations that this inheritance imposes: not as a burden, but as a clarifying framework for understanding what responsible stewardship of democracy actually requires. #16DaysToRemember #June16 #FreedomAndResponsibility
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
When South Africans gather fifty years from now to mark the centenary of June 16, to assess what the generation of 2026 did with the democratic inheritance it received, what will they say? This is not a rhetorical question. It is the accountability framework that Day 15 of #16DaysToRemember asks every young South African to internalise and carry forward. Will they say this generation protected democratic institutions when corruption threatened them? That it expanded economic opportunity when structural exclusion persisted? That it reduced inequality when it remained among the world's most severe? That it strengthened public trust when cynicism and disengagement were the easier choices? Or will they say, as history has said of other generations that inherited exceptional gifts and treated them carelessly, that we received freedom and took it for granted? The verdict is not yet written but it is being written, daily, through every choice this generation makes. #Soweto50YearsLater #RememberReflectRebuild
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Perhaps the most democratically dangerous misconception circulating among young South Africans today is the idea that youth are future leaders,that leadership is a developmental destination to be reached after sufficient seasoning, credentialing, and institutional permission. The students of Soweto demolished this misconception on 16 June 1976, when the most consequential act of civic leadership in the country's modern history was executed not by seasoned politicians or established intellectuals, but by school-going teenagers who had decided that the present was too urgent to defer to an imagined future. Day 15 of #16DaysToRemember insists on the same correction: youth are not future leaders. Youth are leaders now and the challenges of unemployment, GBV, corruption, climate change, digital inequality, and social fragmentation that define this era will not wait for today's young people to grow older before demanding their leadership. #YouthBuildSA #16DaysToRemember
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
The students of Soweto who took to the streets on 16 June 1976 did not know whether they would succeed. They did not possess a strategic roadmap to democracy, a guarantee of international solidarity, or any assurance that their sacrifice would produce the outcome they were risking everything to achieve. They acted despite uncertainty. They acted despite the very real possibility of failure. They acted despite fear and in doing so, they demonstrated one of the most important democratic truths that Day 15 of #16DaysToRemember seeks to transmit to the generation that inherited their sacrifice: history is not shaped by those who wait for certainty. It is shaped by those who act in its absence. The question facing young South Africans in 2026 is not whether the challenges ahead are formidable. It is whether this generation will choose courage over comfort, as the class of 1976 chose before them. #16DaysToRemember #Soweto50YearsLater
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Every generation inherits two things from those who came before: the achievements their predecessors managed to secure, and the unfinished work they did not live to complete. The generation of 1976 inherited apartheid: a juridical system of organised human degradation and left behind democracy. The generation of 2026 inherits that democracy, imperfect, contested, and structurally incomplete. The generation must now reckon with the most consequential question Day 15 of #16DaysToRemember poses: what will we leave behind? Not what we will feel, not what we will commemorate, not what we will post but what we will build, defend, expand, and bequeath to the South Africans who will inherit whatever we make of the freedom that was purchased for us at extraordinary cost. Legacy is not what we own. It is what remains after we are gone. #RememberReflectRebuild #YouthBuildSA
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Freedom, Day 14 of #16DaysToRemember argues, is not the finish line. It is the starting point. This reframing is more radical than it might initially appear. Democratic transitions are frequently narrated as culminating events , moments of arrival after which the hard work is done and the fruits of liberation can simply be enjoyed. South Africa's own transition was narrated in precisely these terms: the 1994 election as the rainbow nation's moment of triumphant arrival, the end of the long walk to freedom. But arrival narratives are democratically dangerous, because they encourage the misapprehension that the work of liberation is complete. The generation of 1976 fought to reach the starting line of a democratic society. The generation of 2026 must understand that the race, toward justice, excellence, accountability, and inclusive prosperity is run from that starting line, not concluded at it. The question is not whether they have freedom. The question is what they are running toward with it. #Soweto50YearsLater #DemocracyWorksForAll
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Rights and responsibilities are not merely correlated in democratic theory, they are constitutively interdependent. A right without a corresponding responsibility is not a democratic right; it is a privilege, and privileges are characteristically fragile. The freedom of expression guaranteed by Section 16 of South Africa's Constitution is only as robust as the culture of honest, evidence-based public discourse that citizens build and maintain around it. The voting right guaranteed by Section 19 is only as meaningful as the electoral participation rate that gives it democratic force. The right to equality guaranteed by Section 9 is only as real as the social commitment to non-discrimination that law alone cannot produce. The generation of 1976 secured the rights. Day 14 of #16DaysToRemember asks the generation of 2026 to accept, without negotiation, the responsibilities those rights carry. #YouthBuildSA #DemocracyWorksForAll
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Rights and responsibilities are not merely correlated in democratic theory, they are constitutively interdependent. A right without a corresponding responsibility is not a democratic right; it is a privilege, and privileges are characteristically fragile. The freedom of expression guaranteed by Section 16 of South Africa's Constitution is only as robust as the culture of honest, evidence-based public discourse that citizens build and maintain around it. The voting right guaranteed by Section 19 is only as meaningful as the electoral participation rate that gives it democratic force. The right to equality guaranteed by Section 9 is only as real as the social commitment to non-discrimination that law alone cannot produce. The generation of 1976 secured the rights. Day 14 of #16DaysToRemember asks the generation of 2026 to accept, without negotiation, the responsibilities those rights carry. #YouthBuildSA #DemocracyWorksForAll
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
There is a profound moral asymmetry at the heart of South Africa's democratic inheritance that Day 14 of #16DaysToRemember asks this generation to confront honestly. The students who marched on 16 June 1976 fought for a South Africa they would never fully see. Many of them were detained, exiled, or killed before democracy arrived. Solomon Mahlangu was executed at twenty-three. Hector Pieterson never reached his teens. These young people bore the full cost of the struggle for a freedom they would not live to enjoy, so that a generation they would never meet could inherit rights they had never had to earn. That asymmetry between those who paid and those who received is not a source of guilt. It is a source of obligation. Day 14 asks: how seriously does the generation of 2026 take that obligation? #June16 #Soweto50YearsLater #RememberReflectRebuild
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
One of the most consequential intellectual errors that prosperous democracies make is the assumption that freedom, once won, is self-sustaining, that the constitutional architecture erected through sacrifice will maintain itself without the continuous investment of civic energy from the generations that inhabit it. History offers no support for this assumption. Democratic systems do not erode through dramatic reversal alone. They erode through the gradual accumulation of small surrenders: the election not bothered with, the corruption tolerated, the accountability not demanded, the institution not defended. The generation of 1976 paid an extraordinary price to build South Africa's democratic foundation. Day 14 of #16DaysToRemember asks, with quiet urgency, whether the generation of 2026 understands that foundations require maintenance and that maintenance requires them. #16DaysToRemember #DemocracyWorksForAll
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
Freedom, in the most robust sense of the term, is not merely the absence of oppression, it is the presence of opportunity, responsibility, and purpose. The generation of 1976 understood this instinctively. They were not marching simply to remove the boot of apartheid from their necks, though that was necessary and urgent. They were marching toward a South Africa in which human potential could flourish without artificial ceiling, a country where dignity was not rationed by race, opportunity was not allocated by ethnicity, and the future was not predetermined by the accident of birth. Day 14 of #16DaysToRemember asks the generation that inherited that vision to sit with a demanding question: now that the boot has been removed, what are we doing with the freedom to stand? #FreedomAndResponsibility #YouthBuildSA
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Kathrada Foundation
Kathrada Foundation@KathradaFound·
They marched for a better future. ✊️✊🏻✊🏼✊🏽✊🏾✊🏿 Today, we continue the journey. 🚶‍♂️🚶‍♀️🚶🏿‍♀️🚶🏾‍♂️ This Youth Day, 50 youth clubs across Gauteng will lead 50 different community activations focused on the issues young people face in 2026. From voter participation and community safety to fighting xenophobia, substance abuse and inequality, young people are turning memory into movement. 📍 Across Gauteng 📅 16 June 2026 Scan the QR code or visit the link below to find an activation near you and be part of the movement: 🔗 bit.ly/50-youth-clubs… #YouthLivesMatter #FromMemoryToMovement #KathyLegacy
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
There is a persistent misconception in democratic societies that citizenship begins and ends at the ballot box, that voting once every five years constitutes the full discharge of a citizen's democratic obligations. This is a dangerously impoverished conception of citizenship, and it is precisely the kind of minimalism that allows democratic institutions to be captured, corrupted, and hollowed out between elections. Active citizenship demands continuous engagement: with community structures, municipal processes, parliamentary submissions, civil society organisations, school governing bodies, public consultations, and the daily work of holding power accountable at every level. The students of 1976 did not participate intermittently, they organised continuously, with sustained commitment and strategic discipline. That model of citizenship is what today's generation must recover and adapt for the challenges of the present. #16DaysToRemember #DemocracyWorksForAll #RememberReflectRebuild
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
The relationship between the generation of 1976 and the generation of 2026 is not merely commemorative, it is structural. The first generation fought for access: access to the democratic space, access to equal citizenship, access to the basic rights of human dignity. They fought for the right to participate in a society that had legally and violently excluded them. The second generation inherits a fundamentally different task: not to gain entry to democratic space, but to ensure that that space remains vibrant, accountable, inclusive, and genuinely responsive to the needs of all South Africans, especially the most marginalised. Their struggle was for freedom. Ours is for meaningful freedom. Their struggle was for the right to be included. Ours is for the quality of what inclusion actually delivers. This is not a lesser struggle. In many ways it is a harder one. #Soweto50YearsLater #16DaysToRemember
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
It has become fashionable in many democratic societies including South Africa, for young people to express disillusionment with political participation. The frustration is understandable. Institutions are slow. Politicians disappoint. Change is incremental. Promises accumulate faster than delivery. Day 13 of #16DaysToRemember asks that this frustration be held alongside an uncomfortable historical comparison: the students of Soweto in 1976 did not merely face slow institutions and disappointing politicians. They faced a police state. They faced detention without trial. They faced live ammunition. They faced a system constitutionally committed to their permanent exclusion. Yet they chose participation over resignation, hope over cynicism, and action over silence, not because conditions were favourable, but because they understood that waiting for favourable conditions is itself a form of surrender. #RememberReflectRebuild #ActiveCitizenship
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Thuli Madonsela Foundation
Thuli Madonsela Foundation@ThumaFoundation·
South Africa's Constitution is among the most progressive founding documents in the world. It guarantees freedom of expression, the right to vote, access to information, the right to peaceful assembly, and the protection of human dignity. But a constitution is only as powerful as the citizens willing to exercise the rights it enshrines. Freedom of expression means nothing if nobody speaks. Voting rights mean nothing if nobody votes. The right to accountability means nothing if nobody demands it. Constitutional rights are not self-executing they require citizens who understand what they are owed, who insist upon receiving it, and who are willing to participate in the democratic processes designed to deliver it. The 1976 generation did not have these rights. They fought for them. The 2026 generation has inherited them. The question is whether this generation will use them. #June16 #16DaysToRemember #DemocracyWorksForAll
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