As South Africa marked 50 years since the Soweto Uprising, rapper Stogie T took a moment to ask a question that continues to echo across generations: Are we truly free?
The award-winning lyricist shared a thoughtful message on Instagram during Youth Day commemorations, reflecting on the legacy of June 16, 1976, and what freedom means half a century later.
“It’s been 50 years since the youth uprising of June 16, 1976. The act of remembrance must include an audit of the promise,” he wrote.
The rapper said that the responsibility now rests with those who inherited the legacy of the young people who marched through Soweto in protest against apartheid education policies.
“As descendants of that uprising, still running with the baton, for the South African project,” he added.
His reflections moved beyond politics and into the personal. Drawing from scripture, he spoke about a form of liberation that cannot be taken away by governments, systems or changing social conditions.
“I left to reflect on true liberation found in the radical autonomy of the soul,” he wrote, before quoting Galatians 5:1: “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free.”
For the rapper, freedom begins within.
“This is the ultimate subversion. A freedom that begins within, an unshakable truth that no state, no system, and no history can ever colonise or revoke.”
His comments arrived as South Africans reflected on one of the defining moments in the country’s history.
On June 16, 1976, thousands of black school learners took to the streets of Soweto to protest the forced use of Afrikaans in schools. The demonstrations were met with police violence, and more than 200 young people lost their lives.
The image of Hector Pieterson became a symbol of resistance around the world.
Fifty years later, many believe the struggle has changed shape rather than disappeared.
While the youth of 1976 fought for access to quality education, many young South Africans today are battling unemployment, poverty and limited economic opportunities.
Historians and community leaders have also urged South Africans not to let Youth Day become only a day of concerts and celebrations.
Instead, they argue that it should remain a moment to confront inequality and renew the promise of a better future.