
With the onset of democracy in South Africa, the ANC led government turned the hostels of Lwandle into family type accommodation. Residents of the area felt that at least one hostel should be preserved to sustain a memory of how the system of apartheid had operated and decided to establish a museum. On Workers Day (1 May) 2000 the museum was officially opened by the poet and ex-Lwandle resident, Sandile Dikeni. The museum’s exhibits commemorate the trials, tribulations and triumphs of migrant workers and hostel life in Southern Africa. According to William Khanuka, one of Lwandle’s oldest residents, the museum is for people now as well as for the coming generations.
At the museum you can learn more about the migrant labour system, walk through an original historic hostel which has been restored with assistance from the United States Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation, the National Heritage Council and the National Lottery Distribution Fund, meet members of the community and view the whole township on a guided walk.