A generation awakened, redefining civic responsibility
Thursday, November 13, 2025
Kenyan youths, popularly known as Gen-Z, demonstrate against the Finance Bill 2024 on Kimathi Street, Nairobi on June 20 2024. Internet

There is something quietly revolutionary about the times we live in. It is not a revolution of fire or flags, but of awareness – a collective awakening born from connection, curiosity, and courage. A new generation has emerged that sees the world more clearly than those before it, not because they were told what to see, but because they can see for themselves.

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Through a small screen, they witness distant lives, working systems, and functioning democracies. They see how nations thrive when truth matters, when leaders serve rather than rule, when transparency is not a favour but a duty. They see possibilities that older generations could not easily imagine and they ask, quietly but firmly, "Why not us too?”

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The older generation lived in an age of limited information. What they knew often came filtered through newspapers, radios, or the voices of authority. Questioning power could feel dangerous, even futile. People accepted what they were told, not because they lacked intelligence, but because they lacked access.

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Today, access is no longer a privilege – it is everywhere. With one tap, a young person in one corner of the world can watch how another nation handles justice, education, or health. They can compare promises with results, rhetoric with reality.

This awareness has changed everything. It has replaced blind loyalty with critical thought. It has given rise to a generation that does not simply inherit beliefs but interrogates them. They respect tradition but refuse to be confined by it. They honour their elders but insist that progress must not skip their turn.

From acceptance to accountability

The new generation does not riot for the sake of noise; it questions for the sake of clarity. Their restlessness is not rebellion but responsibility. They have realized that silence is no longer noble, that patience without progress is not virtue but surrender.

In contrast, the older generation often learned endurance how to survive disappointment, how to make peace with limitation. They were taught that authority was sacred, and obedience was safety. That era built resilience but it also bred resignation.

The younger generation has inherited that resilience but turned it outward. They are not content to adapt; they want to advance. They have seen what good governance looks like, what inclusive leadership can achieve, and they wonder why the same cannot exist everywhere.

Their demands are not radical; they are rational. They ask for fairness, opportunity, honesty. They are not seeking to overthrow, but to rebuild.

The internet: A mirror and a window

The internet, for all its flaws, has become the great equalizer of knowledge. It does more than connect people; it connects possibilities. It shows young people not just what their nations are, but what they could be.

In one moment, they can learn how another society protects its citizens’ rights; in another, how communities rise from adversity. The result is not envy, it's enlightenment. They do not wish to copy others blindly but to adopt what works, to prove that progress is not foreign; it is human.

This digital generation carries the world in their pockets, but more importantly, they carry responsibility in their minds. They have learned that awareness without action is emptiness.

The language of awareness

The new generation speaks a different language; one made of reason, empathy, and vision. They don’t divide themselves by ideology as much as they unite around principle.

They are less impressed by power and more inspired by integrity.

They have no patience for systems that reward corruption or leaders who confuse authority with wisdom. They also understand that change cannot come through anger alone. Real reform requires discipline, creativity, and collaboration.

This balance between conviction and civility is what makes this generation unique. They challenge without hatred. They question without chaos. They know that dignity is not loud, but steady.

What the world can learn

For societies and leaders everywhere, this generational awareness is both a challenge and a gift. A challenge because transparency demands accountability, and the young no longer settle for half-truths. A gift because this consciousness can renew the moral strength of nations that have grown weary of cynicism.

The lesson is simple: awareness cannot be reversed. Once people learn to question, they will not unlearn it. Once they discover comparison, they will not return to blind acceptance. The most successful societies of tomorrow will be those that treat this awareness not as a threat, but as a partner in progress.

Listening as leadership

What the new generation asks for is not revolution, but recognition. They want to be seen as partners, not passengers, in shaping the future. They want their energy to be met with opportunity, not suspicion.

It is easy for the powerful to mistake awareness for defiance. But awareness is not rebellion; it is growth. And when societies learn to listen to their young, they do not lose control – they gain direction.

The older generation may have built the foundation, but it is the new generation that must build the future. And this future will not be built on obedience, but on understanding.

Toward a conscious future

Every generation has its role. The one that came before taught endurance; the grace to survive. The one rising now teaches awareness; the courage to question, to compare and to care.

They are not perfect, but they are awake. They are not reckless, but they are restless. They are not angry at the world; they are simply unwilling to let it remain unchanged. The awareness that now flows through this generation is irreversible. It is the quiet light that exposes lies, challenges mediocrity, and insists on better.

And that light if embraced may guide us all toward a more honest, more humane, and more hopeful world.

The writer is an international relations and diplomacy enthusiast.