Reminiscing on true economic empowerment and its implications for social justice sets the stage for critical analysis and reader engagement.
South Africa has entered its proverbial hall of mirrors, where everyone must be brave enough to face a mirror and reflect on their origins, especially those who benefited from past injustices. This is because our South African identity stubbornly remains a point of discontent regarding the arrangements of economic and symbolic power that have escaped critical scrutiny. We are therefore compelled to examine the phenomenon of beneficiaries of past injustices and accept their recognition. In recognising those injustices, we must ask whether our acknowledgement that they are there and true is simply about compliance to the Constitution or an attempt to uphold the status quo. For posterity’s sake, we should question whether the recognition is a symptomatic feature of guilt management by those who continue to benefit from the injustice. Is this a form of political or social mastery to insulate the benefits of acknowledged injustices without committing to the political or epistemologica...