Senzeni Na?

Senzeni Na?” (also spelled Senzenina, English: What Have We Done?) is a South African anti‐apartheid folk song. The Xhosa/Zulu language song is commonly sung at funerals, demonstrations and in churches. Activist Duma Ndlovu compared the influence of “Senzeni Na?” to that of the American protest song, “We Shall Overcome.”

The song has been around at least since the 1950s, and it reached the height of its popularity during the 1980s. The origins of the song are unclear. Zimbabwean poet Albert Nyathi claims to have written “Senzeni Na?” on the day that activist Chris Hani died. However, Nyathi’s “Senzeni Na?” uses a different melody and altered lyrics. Either way, Hani was assassinated on April 10, 1993, by which time the song had already been sung for decades.

Lyrics

There doesn’t seem to be one universally agreed on set of lyrics. Below are two versions, the bottom one being the more aggressive of the two:

Appearances in the Western world

While best known in South Africa, “Senzeni Na?” has gained some popularity overseas. The song was featured in the anti‐apartheid film The Power of One and a recording of the song as sung at the funeral of Steve Biko can be heard at the end of the album version of “Biko” by Peter Gabriel. The music was used for an adaptation of the hymn “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross” by Isaac Watts in the Mennonite Hymnal: A Worship Book.

Podcasts:

PLAYLIST TIME:

Senzenina

by: Hans Zimmer

Senzenina
Sono sethu ubumnyama
Abulale[ni] afe wonke
Mayibuye iAfrika
The translation:
What have we done.
Our crime is to be poor, our crime is to be black.
Let Africa come back.




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The sound of freedom: how music became a powerful weapon in South Africa's fight against apartheid

Independent online (SA) 21 Mar 2025
The early resistance ... The 1950s ... Dorothy Masuka’s "uDr ... Songs such as "Thina Sizwe" and "Senzeni na" were popularised by fighters and black anti-apartheid activists, writes Keanan Christine Jaftha in her thesis on "Mapping Liberation Through Song" ... .
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