CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Hundreds of people gathered in Bo-Kaap, Cape Town’s historic Muslim quarter, to break their fast together during Ramadan at an annual mass iftar that has grown into both a spiritual tradition and a statement of resistance against gentrification. Africanews reported that the event, held in the streets of the neighborhood known for its brightly colored houses, drew people from different cultures and faiths.
For residents, the gathering is about more than food at sunset. “It gives you that feeling of unity, we still belong,” resident Mastoera Adams said, adding that the event helps affirm community identity despite mounting development pressures in Bo-Kaap. Africanews said the iftar originally began as a protest against gentrification in the area, where locals have long feared being priced out or culturally sidelined.
Local organizers have framed this year’s event in similar terms. Ahead of the gathering, VOC News reported that the purpose of the mass iftar was to foster social unity across communities and religions while reflecting the spirit of South Africa’s “rainbow nation.” The event included road closures, devotional recitations and communal fast-breaking in the heart of the district.
Bo-Kaap has become one of Cape Town’s most recognizable neighborhoods, but it is also under growing strain from tourism, outsider-owned development and rising property pressure. A 2025 report described the area as caught between preserving its Cape Malay and Muslim heritage and accommodating expanding tourism and real-estate interest. Residents have warned that gentrification and over-tourism threaten not just housing affordability, but also the neighborhood’s cultural and religious character.
That tension explains why the annual iftar carries such symbolic weight. In a district where the call to prayer, mosques and family networks remain central to daily life, gathering in the street to break the fast has become a visible way of asserting continuity and belonging. So while the event is rooted in Ramadan, it also serves as a public reminder that Bo-Kaap is not just a tourist backdrop, residents say, but a living community determined to protect its identity


















