The Silent Weapon: How Narratives Built — and How I Intend to Rebuild — project Hillbrow
The Silent Weapon: Narratives have Built and Rebuilt- Project Hillbrow
By Noko Noko Maleka | Insight Jozi News
There is a quiet force that shapes nations, defines communities, and determines how people see themselves long before policy, economics, or politics intervene. That force is narrative.
“I have a view that the main catalyst behind our societal issues is narrative. Narrative creates perception — and perception determines the result.”
For decades, global storytelling has subtly elevated certain societies while diminishing others. A repeated message becomes accepted truth. When one group is consistently portrayed as advanced, refined, and superior, and another as struggling, chaotic, and dependent, the psychological impact is inevitable: people begin to internalize those hierarchies.
This is not always overt. It happens through images, headlines, conversations, and even jokes. A narrative becomes a silent weapon.
And Africa, I believe, has long been on the receiving end of it.
Africa and the burden of perception
Across the continent, social and political challenges are often explained through economics or governance. But I have come to believe that a deeper root exists: the stories told about African people, African communities, and African potential.
“The fact that we still call others ‘superpowers’ shows how strong the spell of narrative is. We have accepted a hierarchy of worth, intelligence, beauty, and progress that was constructed over time.”
When a society is constantly portrayed as broken, it begins to see itself that way. When the world only sees crisis, it begins to engage with that society through pity, exploitation, or opportunism.
Communities end up begging for investment. Investors dictate harsh terms. Exploitation becomes normalized. Meanwhile, nations that guard their image fiercely are treated with respect — even when facing similar internal problems.
Narrative, in this sense, determines economic dignity.
Media, responsibility, and the weight of storytelling
My approach as a journalist has evolved around this understanding.
“I have struggled to become a famous journalist because I made a decision to start writing positive stories about Africans — even when there is bad. I write against the narrative.”
I am not advocating denial of reality. Crime, inequality, and social distress are real and must be addressed. But amplifying only negative stories creates a distorted national identity.
“As media, the more bad we publish, the worse we appear as a nation. And perception shapes how the world treats us — and how we treat ourselves.”
The mission is simple: fix the bad, but stop branding communities through their worst moments.
Hillbrow: a community reduced to a stereotype
Few places illustrate the power of narrative more than Hillbrow.
Mention the suburb, and the response is almost automatic: crime, drugs, homelessness, decay.
Yet this single storyline has overshadowed its deeper identity — its cultural diversity, entrepreneurial spirit, density of human connection, and resilience.
For years, Hillbrow has been sold to the public as something dangerous and undesirable. Over time, that perception has attracted exactly the elements it warns against. When a place is labeled lawless, lawlessness finds comfort there. When immorality is normalized, it grows.
Narrative becomes destiny.
“Hillbrow is the brand I want to sell. I’m going to use my PR skills, my talent, and everything I have to resell this brand. Hillbrow has been sold far below its true value.”
I believe that, if branded properly, Hillbrow could be one of the most dynamic urban communities on the continent — a symbol of African urban resilience rather than urban failure.
Igniting dignity: the documentary and the Valentine’s Day intervention
This vision is not theoretical. It is tied to action.
Our recent documentary highlighted the conditions under which 79 orphans in Hillbrow live — children navigating hardship in an environment already burdened by stigma. It was not just about showing pain. It was about igniting a different emotional response: empathy, responsibility, and dignity.
We reached out to the public to support these children and many homeless residents, because transformation begins when communities see value in themselves and in each other again.
“The first step is to ignite a flame of positivity — a desire to restore each other’s dignity.”
That flame carried into our Valentine’s Day community event — an initiative planned within only a few weeks, without a formal budget, but powered by belief and compassion.
The disadvantaged community of Hillbrow shared meals, drinks, laughter, and music. Local artists gave their time and talent, and one of the country’s beloved performers, Nokwazi Dlamini, delivered a performance that brought pure joy. At one point, she called a homeless man onto the stage to perform with her — a moment that captured the heart of what the day was about: dignity, inclusion, and humanity.
The event also honoured heroes within the community — individuals and groups working quietly to restore safety and dignity. Trophies were awarded to the Hillbrow SAPS Social Crime Prevention Unit and the The Bad Boyz Group for their commitment and positive impact.
In my speech, I made it clear that they were not the only ones deserving recognition. Many others continue to serve Hillbrow tirelessly. The awards were meant as encouragement — a message to continue doing more, and to know their work is seen.
This entire event was organised with almost no financial backing. Donations were limited, and some service providers are still owed. But we believe we will raise the funds to honour those commitments. What carried the day was not money — it was heart.
We thank every single person who contributed, supported, showed up, performed, donated, or simply shared the message.
Business with purpose: feeding a community
The main host, PP Soup Grills, closed sales for the day and gave away meals to hundreds who attended.
In his speech, the owner shared a vision rooted in humanity:
His desire is for every family, every child, and every homeless person in Hillbrow to have at least one decent meal a day. If he could achieve that, he said, he would be happy to continue doing business in the area and would sleep peacefully at night.
He called on fellow businesses in Hillbrow to join him in feeding the community.
“If we allow this community to continue being broken, ultimately we will have no one to do business for,” he told fellow business owners.
It was a powerful reminder that economic growth and social dignity are inseparable.
Changing the story, changing the outcome
I often compare communities to families. Publicly airing every internal failure may attract sympathy, but it can also reduce respect, confidence, and perceived stability.
Societies operate similarly. When only dysfunction is highlighted, worth declines — socially, economically, and psychologically.
“A narrative determines our worth. If we change how we speak about ourselves, our communities, and what we value, we will begin to see each other differently.”
This is my starting point: telling good stories loudly, fixing problems strategically, and refusing to let negative perception define African identity.
Hillbrow is only the beginning.
In the documentaries to come, I want to show the world a version of this community many people know — but have subconsciously stopped seeing: its humanity, its culture, its potential, and its soul.
Because sometimes the most powerful revolution is not political or economic.
Sometimes, it begins with changing the story.
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I believe in betterment of communities ,let us build our community by working together.
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