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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Max du Preez

Interviewed May 20, 2024

[June 16], 1976. I was in Soweto as a young crime reporter with the Soweto student uprising, and safely on the side of the police, always behind the police lines. But I did see young black people, 15, 16, 17, stepping up to the front of the police line, and the police would say, “If you cross this line we’re gonna shoot you,” and then they crossed the line, and then they got shot. And you’d think—part of you thinks, “Oh, good, one fewer of these revolutionaries that want to overthrow the comfortable life that I’m living.”

[Soweto, meaning Southwest Township, was a community near Johannesburg designated for black residents. Under apartheid, townships were residential areas designated for non-white groups. Non-whites were prohibited from living in areas reserved for whites. The Soweto Uprising was a series of protests led by South African high school students on June 16, 1976. Students from various Sowetan schools began demonstrating in the streets against Afrikaans as the primary language of educational instruction.]

And the other voice says, “What motivates a 16- or 17-year old child to knowingly give his own life for freedom? What is it that I don’t know about this stuff?”

I think that’s the way change worked in my life. I couldn’t resist it. It happened to me.