At a time when unemployment and poverty must be tackled head on, our country appears rudderless
		
	 
	
		
		The past cannot be erased, but leaders can choose how to respond to it and how to forge a better future
		
	 
	
		
		How does South Africa return to a pre-pandemic world, or at least one closely resembling it? That’s the question for policymakers as our country’s recovery lags its peers
		
	 
	
		
		This is an edited extract from Razina Theba’s new book ‘A Home on Vorster Street: A Memoir’
		
	 
	
		
		South Africans’ behaviour and attitudes show that poor black working-class people, and black women in particular, are denied
their innate humanity
		
	 
	
		
		Mahmood Mamdani’s latest book, ‘Neither Settler nor Native’ asks a political question: Rights for whom?
		
	 
	
		
		Veteran journalist Felicia Mabuza-Suttle tells us about how she dealt with patriarchy, her passion for youth development and why she is a germaphobe
		
	 
	
		
		The reopened inquest into the death in detention of Dr Hoosen Haffejee in 1977 has heard that the “pliant” magistrate at the original inquest, Trevor Blunden, ignored evidence that he was badly assaulted to exonerate the security police torturers who killed him. Haffejee, a Pietermartizburg-born dentist, died in detention at the Brighton Beach police station […]
		
	 
	
		
		Rita Ndzanga demonstrated that ordinary people together can do extraordinary things. It’s our turn now
		
	 
	
		
		Author and academic Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela spoke to Nicolene de Wee about the government’s failure to heal a broken country
		
	 
	
		
		Rebuilding is crucial, but democracies cannot allow themselves to be held to ransom by the destruction of anarchists in dictating where public funds should be spent
		
	 
	
		
		Dugald Macdonald made his Springbok debut against the British Lions in 1974, a disastrous experience difficult to forget 
		
	 
	
		
		Judge Navi Pillay talks to Athandiwe Saba about being the daughter of a bus driver, a little girl who swore at school, and the pressure of being a leading woman in the world while being a mother at home
		
	 
	
		
		Complaining about ‘reverse racism’ and BEE serves no one. South Africa’s white youth should focus on entrepreneurship instead
		
	 
	
		
		‘The generation of 1976 did not fight to end the injustices of their time only for there to be the dawn of a climate apartheid’
		
	 
	
		
		His father took him to isangoma when he wanted to be an actor. Today Dr John Kani is revered the world over. He tells Athandiwe Saba about his passions
		
	 
	
		
		Labelling them in the same way as youth in the US leads to false perceptions and misunderstanding
		
	 
	
		
		Teacher training programmes need to cultivate a social consciousness to transform a system that abjects black learners
		
	 
	
		
		Thirty-three years since Dulcie September’s assassination, a new documentary hopes to bring her name back into the public consciousness
		
	 
	
		
		An installation and a documentary about the notorious residential school system amplify calls to define such deaths worldwide as genocide
		
	 
	
		
		Suntosh Pillay speaks to fellow psychologist Anton Botha, who is also a former UN staff member, about Israel and Palestine and whether or not the United Nations is abdicating its duties to maintain peace
		
	 
	
		
		Review: Bloody Sunday: The Nun, the Defiance Campaign and South Africa’s Secret Massacre by Mignonne Breier 
		
	 
	
		
		The Reformed Structures photographic series marries Siya Mahlaba’s love for architecture and photography with his inquiry into segregation in the Dutch Reformed Church
		
	 
	
		
		The signs are there that the Israeli state may have ‘won’ the most recent battle against Palestinians but could be losing the protracted war, especially in the court of public opinion
		
	 
	
		
		The body’s inaction during the Iraq war and Russia’s annexation of the Crimea makes it weaker when it comes to negotiation peace in the Middle East
		
	 
	
		
		In a three-part series on South Africa’s land question, Tembeka Ngcukaitobi takes a look at the colonial conquests that drove us here
		
	 
	
		
		SA BDS Coalition calls for the world to listen to what Israel’s actions are saying and apply full sanctions against that apartheid state
		
	 
	
		
		Israel’s iron grip over Palestinians had its beginnings in the demise of the Ottoman Empire and Britain and France’s arbitrary mapping out of the Middle East
		
	 
	
		
		The Nakba began with the establishment of Israel in 1948 and has never ended. Palestinian are still removed from their land and their home and are still being killed and discriminated against
		
	 
	
		
		How Tim Jenkin, Stephen Lee and Alexandre Moumbaris escaped Pretoria Central with a handmade wooden key
		
	 
	
		
		An exhibition of Matthew Krouse’s underground films reveal an agitator awed by the tradition of ‘dirty queens’
		
	 
	
		
		A message to South Africa from European friends for Freedom Day