MY NEIGHBOUR’S HANDS & MY OWN I am writing to you from my stoep in Akasia, where the Jacarandas are not blooming—the water crisis has seen to that. The other morning, I watched my neighbour, a young man named Thabo, a graduate in logistics, walk to the taxi rank at 5 a.m. He holds a degree that cost his widowed mother her retirement. He will sit at a call centre for R3,800 a month―because for three years he has applied to hundreds of jobs, and this is the one that answered. And I have asked myself: Is Thabo diligent? By every measure of human effort, yes. Then I hear our President address the nation. Finance Minister Godongwana announces a budget of R292.8 billion for social grants, reaching more than 26 million beneficiaries. And I nod with gratitude, for the vulnerable must eat. But then I open the Mail & Guardian. On Workers’ Day 2026, the headline cuts deeper than a panga: “Workers’ Day is hollow when millions lack jobs”. The official unemployment rate stands at 31.4 per ce...
The Rudder of Your Response By Harold Mawela A Memorable Morning on the R21 I recall a bitter morning in May 2023. I was driving along the R21 from Pretoria toward the OR Tambo Airport, the dawn still fighting its way through the smog of industrial Ekurhuleni. My car—a second-hand 2016 Toyota Corolla I had named "Grace"—began to stutter and choke. The service engine light flashed like an accusation. There I was, stranded on the shoulder between the Boschkop and R25 off-ramps, watching taxis laden with commuters honk past without mercy. My smartphone battery was at 7 percent. My meeting with a publisher in Sandton was slipping away. I sat there feeling the full weight of South African frustration: the Eskom load-shedding hanging over my head like a sword, the fuel price at R25 per litre making a tow truck feel like a luxury cruise, the crime statistics that made me glance nervously into my rearview mirror. "God," I muttered, "why do You allow these inconvenience...