Being Coloured in South Africa in 2026 means navigating a identity that the country has never quite known what to do with. Some embrace the term proudly, as a reflection of a genuinely unique cultural heritage, a community forged from centuries of Cape Malay ancestry, Khoisan roots, European bloodlines, and everything in between. Others reject it entirely, pointing out that “Coloured” was a classification imposed by the apartheid government to divide people who might otherwise have stood together. Both positions are legitimate. Both come from real pain. And the tension between them plays out daily in homes, schools, workplaces, and social media threads across the Western Cape and beyond. What makes it more complicated is the political dimension. Coloured South Africans have historically felt squeezed from both sides, seen as “not Black enough” to benefit fully from post-apartheid transformation policies, and carrying the stigma of stereotypes that have followed the community for generations. The social pressures are real. The stereotypes about gangsterism, drug addiction, and dysfunction are weaponised against an entire community while the structural reasons behind those realities — poverty, historical displacement, deliberate underdevelopment — are conveniently ignored by the same people doing the stereotyping. Political parties court the Coloured vote every election cycle and forget about the community the moment the results come in. And yet. The cultural pride is undeniable and it is growing louder. The food, the music, the humour, the language, Afrikaans in all its Cape Coloured complexity, the resilience of a community that has survived being nobody’s priority for centuries. The debate about what to call themselves, how to define themselves, where they fit in the South African story, that debate is not a sign of weakness. It is a sign of a community that refuses to let anyone else write its identity for it. That conversation is worth having. Loudly. On their own terms.