Celebrating Youth Month Through Legacy and Action
June is Youth Month in South Africa, a time to honor the fearless spirit of young people who dare to dream, act, and shape the future. While we commemorate the historic uprising of June 16, 1976, when Sowetoโs youth stood resilient against an oppressive system, Youth Month is more than a reflection on the past itโs a call to action for todayโs generation. Itโs a reminder that your ideas, no matter how small they seem, can ignite change that will echo across time and borders. Take inspiration from Enoch Sontonga, a young visionary whose creativity left an indelible mark on Africa. This Youth Month, letโs ignite that same courage and drive in you to turn your ideas into reality.
The Legacy of Enoch Sontonga, A Young Dreamerโs Impact.
In 1897, a 24-year-old Xhosa teacher and choirmaster named Enoch Mankayi Sontonga sat in a Methodist mission school in Nancefield, near Johannesburg, and penned a hymn that would become a beacon of hope for millions of people across Southern Africa. He was Born around 1873 in Uitenhage, Eastern Cape, and he was a product of the Lovedale Mission Training College, where he honed his skills as an educator and poet. At just 24, he composed Nkosi Sikelelโ iAfrika (โGod Bless Africaโ), a prayer for unity and liberation, initially intended for his school choir. Little did he know that his words and melody would transcend his lifetime, becoming a pan-African anthem of resilience and freedom.
First performed publicly in 1899 at the ordination of Reverend John Hlengani Mboweni, the hymn gained traction when John Langalibalele Dubeโs Ohlange Institute choir sang it at the South African Native National Congress in 1912. By 1925, the African National Congress (ANC) adopted it as their official closing anthem, and it became a defiant cry against apartheid, banned by the regime for its association with the liberation struggle. After Sontongaโs untimely death in 1905 at age 32, Xhosa poet Samuel Mqhayi added seven stanzas in 1927, deepening its call for Africaโs redemption.
Today, Nkosi Sikelelโ iAfrika is intertwined into South Africaโs national anthem, alongside parts of Die Stem van Suid-Afrika, symbolizing โunityโ in a post-apartheid era, as declared by Nelson Mandela in 1994. Beyond South Africa, its melody has been adopted as the national anthem of Tanzania (Mungu Ibariki Afrika), Zambia, and briefly Zimbabwe and Namibia, proving the universal power of a young personโs vision. Sontonga, who died young and relatively unknown, shows us that age is no barrier to impact. His story challenges you to act on your ideas now, trusting they can ripple far beyond your immediate world.
June 16, 1976, The Resilience of Youth.
Youth Monthโs roots lie in the courage of the 1976 Soweto Uprising, when thousands of students, some as young as 13, marched against the apartheid governmentโs imposition of Afrikaans as the medium of instruction in schools. On June 16, these young people faced brutal repression hundreds were killed, including Hector Pieterson, whose image became a symbol of resistance. Their defiance wasnโt just a protest; it was a declaration that the youth could challenge injustice and demand a better future. Their resilience galvanized the anti-apartheid movement, proving that young voices could shift the course of history.
The lesson from 1976 isnโt just about rebellion itโs about conviction. Those students didnโt wait for permission or for someone older to lead. They saw a problem, organized, and acted, despite the risks. Their legacy reminds us that youth is not a time to wait but a time to move, to create, to build.
Your Ideas Matter: Turning Vision into Action.
Sontonga and the youth of 1976 share a common thread: they didnโt let their age or circumstances define their potential. You, too, have the power to execute your ideas, whether itโs starting a community project, launching a business, or creating art that speaks to your truth. Hereโs how to channel that energy this Youth Month:
- Start Small, Dream Big: Sontonga wrote Nkosi Sikelelโ iAfrika for his school choir, not imagining it would become a continental anthem. Your idea doesnโt need to be grand from the start. Write that poem, code that app, or pitch that project. Small steps can lead to monumental outcomes.
- Embrace Resilience: The Soweto youth faced unimaginable odds, yet their courage persisted. When setbacks hit whether itโs funding, doubt, or failure keep pushing. Resilience turns ideas into reality.
- Collaborate and Connect: Sontongaโs hymn grew through the voices of choirs and activists who carried it forward. Find your community friends, mentors, or online networks who share your vision and can amplify your impact.
- Act Now: At 24, Sontonga didnโt wait for the โperfect moment.โ The youth of 1976 didnโt hesitate to demand change. Your age is your strength your energy, fresh perspective, and boldness are assets. Seize this moment.
A Call to the Youth of 2025.
Youth Month 2025 is your invitation to step up. Whether youโre coding a new platform, advocating for climate action, or starting a local initiative, your ideas can shape the future, just as Sontongaโs hymn and the Soweto uprising did. South Africaโs history is rich with young people who refused to be silenced. From Sontongaโs soulful prayer at 24 to the fearless marchers of 1976, their legacy lives in you. So, whatโs your Nkosi Sikelelโ iAfrika? Whatโs the idea burning inside you? This June, donโt just celebrate Youth Month make it your launchpad. Write it, build it, share it. The world is waiting for your voice.
About the Author:
Sandile Mlangeni is a 2019 GP-based Activator, he is passionate about youth activism. Sandile regards it as important to contribute his views and experiences to recognised entities seeking to develop communities. He started his journey as an activist in 2012 when he started collaborating with community-based organisations in his hometown in Tsakane and Kwa-Thema Ekurhuleni.