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Kwa Khaya Le Ndaba Cultural Village anchors something Randburg residents increasingly seek: spaces where cultural heritage is actively performed and taught rather than displayed behind glass. The centre operates as living workspace where traditions continue, where knowledge passes from elders to younger people, where people from outside the culture can learn respectfully. In a city as demographically mixed as Randburg, where many families have migrated from rural areas or other provinces, such spaces become crucial—they're where children connect to ancestry, where cultural continuity happens, where pride in heritage gets actively practised rather than nostalgically remembered. The village model (rather than museum model) means people come not just to watch but to participate, to learn a craft, to understand the logic behind practices that might otherwise seem quaint or distant. For Randburg's communities, this centre holds people's stories.
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