• About
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • home new
  • Privacy Policy
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Family
    • Health
    • Beauty
    • Travel
  • Entertainment
    • Music
      • Travel
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Competitions
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
The Vibe ZA
Advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Family
    • Health
    • Beauty
    • Travel
  • Entertainment
    • Music
      • Travel
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Competitions
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
The Vibe ZA
No Result
View All Result
Home Features

What About the Boys 2

A New National Youth Initiative Challenging South Africa to Rethink the Future

in Lifestyle
Reading Time: 4 min
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

South Africa’s young people are growing up in a world shaped by pressure, uncertainty and increasingly complex social realities.

They are navigating identity, relationships, emotional wellbeing and expectations while living in a country still deeply affected by gender-based violence, youth unemployment and a shortage of safe spaces where honest conversations can happen openly and without judgement.

And for many young South Africans, those conversations are long overdue.

Now, a bold national youth education initiative is attempting to change that narrative from the ground up.

A National Programme Built Around Difficult but Necessary Conversations

What About the Boys 2 (WATB 2) has officially launched nationally, positioning itself as more than just a school programme, but as a long-term social intervention designed to engage learners at the very stage where attitudes, values and behaviours begin taking shape.

Produced by Primestars in partnership with YouthStart Foundation, the initiative uses locally produced film, mentorship-driven discussions and structured learner dialogue to create meaningful engagement among Grade 9 to Grade 12 learners across South Africa.

The programme focuses on themes many schools and communities often struggle to address openly: respect, accountability, emotional health, identity, leadership and relationships.

But what distinguishes WATB 2 is its emphasis on participation rather than passive awareness.

Instead of simply delivering messages to learners, the programme creates spaces where young people actively engage with one another through conversation, reflection and shared experiences.

Nkosinathi Moshoana, Chief Executive Officer at Primestars, Nozipho January-Bardill Independent Ambassador for the Living with Dignity Hub, Anglo American, Tana van Straaten, Manager of Living with Dignity Hub and Martin Sweet, Chief executive of Primestars.

Why the Programme Matters Now

The launch comes at a time when South Africa continues grappling with deeply interconnected social challenges.

Gender-based violence remains one of the country’s most urgent crises, while economic hardship, social instability and mental health pressures continue shaping the realities many young people face daily.

Against that backdrop, WATB 2 recognises something often overlooked within education systems: academic performance cannot be separated from emotional wellbeing, social environments and personal values.

The programme builds on the success of its first phase, but expands its scope significantly by bringing boys and girls together into the same spaces for collective dialogue.

That decision is intentional.

For the first time within the programme, learners engage side by side, watching the same stories unfold and participating in the same guided conversations.

The aim is not only awareness, but empathy.

Building Understanding Between Young People

Speaking at the premiere of WATB 2 on behalf of Anglo American South Africa, independent ambassador for the Living with Dignity Hub, Nozipho January-Bardill, described the significance of that shared experience.

“For the first time, boys and girls will be in the room together. They will watch the same film, hear the same stories and have the same conversations. That is a deliberate act of co-creation — helping young people to understand each other, respect each other, and build a different future for South Africa together.”

The programme’s structure encourages learners to explore difficult social dynamics collectively rather than through division.

Through guided mentorship and facilitated discussion, participants are encouraged to develop emotional intelligence, accountability and mutual respect — qualities increasingly recognised as essential to building safer and more inclusive communities.

Education Beyond the Classroom

As lead sponsor of the film, Anglo American views WATB 2 as part of its broader long-term investment in education and youth development within South Africa.

Through Kumba Iron Ore, the programme will specifically extend into schools across the Northern Cape, including communities where Anglo American operates.

This ensures that learners in under-served areas remain included in national conversations around youth development, leadership and social responsibility.

Importantly, Anglo American employees themselves will also participate as volunteer mentors, facilitating structured follow-up discussions with learners after screenings.

That direct involvement embeds professionals, role models and community leaders into the programme’s long-term impact.

Creating Space for a Generation Ready to Speak

According to Martin Sweet, young people are already prepared for these conversations.

What has often been missing is the space to have them.

“Young people are ready for these conversations. WATB 2 creates the space to have them — and to build a generation that leads with empathy, integrity and respect.”

That philosophy sits at the centre of the initiative.

Rather than framing young people as passive recipients of guidance, WATB 2 positions them as active participants in shaping a healthier social future.

A Long-Term Vision for South Africa’s Youth

Learner screenings are taking place from 16 May to 6 June across all nine provinces through the Primestars School Screening Programme, with the film also available digitally through Primestars Digital.

But organisers view the programme as far more than a short-term awareness campaign.

Its broader ambition is to contribute meaningfully to national conversations around youth development, gender-based violence prevention and inclusive growth.

Ultimately, WATB 2 asks a deeper question about South Africa’s future:

What happens when young people are finally given the tools, language and safe spaces to understand each other better?

In a country searching for sustainable solutions to long-standing social challenges, that question may prove more important than ever.

Because real change rarely begins with policy alone.

Sometimes it begins in a classroom, with a conversation young people were finally allowed to have.

Previous Post

Eat Your Way Through Bangkok

Next Post

South African Rowers Are Making Waves Across the World Stage

Related Posts

Sport

USA Triumphs Over South Africa at Nedbank International Polo as “Africa in Full Colour” Transforms Johannesburg

18th May 2026
Features

Nestlé KitKat® Brings Formula 1® Fever to South Africa With a Chance to Win a Monza Grand Prix Experience

18th May 2026
Travel

Eat Your Way Through Bangkok

18th May 2026
Fashion

Sunglass Hut’s Father’s Day 2026 Collection Turns Everyday Style Into the Ultimate Gift

18th May 2026
Features

Heineken® Turns the UEFA Champions League Final Into South Africa’s Ultimate Football Watch Party

18th May 2026
Features

Springboks Go Hands-On With Samsung’s New Galaxy S26 Ultra in Champion-Level Tech Showcase

15th May 2026
Next Post

South African Rowers Are Making Waves Across the World Stage

Nestlé KitKat® Brings Formula 1® Fever to South Africa With a Chance to Win a Monza Grand Prix Experience

USA Triumphs Over South Africa at Nedbank International Polo as “Africa in Full Colour” Transforms Johannesburg

Eon The Mod Brings the “Make UBUNTU Great Again” Tour to Johannesburg

HONOR 600 Series Set to Raise the Bar in South Africa With Powerful AI Photography and a Massive 7000mAh Battery

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

WIN 1 of 3 Whitley Neill Gin Bottles

4th October 2024
Screenshot

Create Your Own Home Gin Bar to Wow Your Friends

4th October 2024

Win a Whiskas Purr O’Clock Hamper

11th September 2024

Win a TCL Tablet, Router & Earphones Now!

18th September 2024
Screenshot

Flavoured Gins are All The Rage and Here’s Why

14th September 2024

realme C61 arrives in South Africa

3rd October 2024

What time is Purr O’Clock? All the time!

11th September 2024

Luju Food & Lifestyle Festival 2022 Line-Up Announced

19292

Africa’s Premiere Joburg Film Fest Returns in 2023

17772

10 Ways to De-stress Like a KZN South Coast local

14017

5 Things to Consider Before Traveling with Your Pet

11223

Adidas Unites with Thebe Magugu in FW22

4510

Joburg Theatre’s Panto of All Pantos Coming Soon

4379

Make Peace with Daily Exfoliation

3814

HONOR 600 Series Set to Raise the Bar in South Africa With Powerful AI Photography and a Massive 7000mAh Battery

18th May 2026

Eon The Mod Brings the “Make UBUNTU Great Again” Tour to Johannesburg

18th May 2026

USA Triumphs Over South Africa at Nedbank International Polo as “Africa in Full Colour” Transforms Johannesburg

18th May 2026

Nestlé KitKat® Brings Formula 1® Fever to South Africa With a Chance to Win a Monza Grand Prix Experience

18th May 2026

South African Rowers Are Making Waves Across the World Stage

18th May 2026

What About the Boys 2

18th May 2026

Eat Your Way Through Bangkok

18th May 2026

Browse by Category

  • Beauty
  • Competitions
  • Entertainment
  • Family
  • Fashion
  • Features
  • Food
  • Lifestyle
  • Money
  • Music
  • Premium
  • Sport
  • Tech
  • Travel