Portrait of Gareth Anver Prince, Rastafari elder and constitutional advocate

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Justice. Dignity. Freedom. Reform.

Three decades of constitutional advocacy for religious freedom, indigenous rights, and human dignity in South Africa.

Who he is

Gareth Anver Prince is a South African constitutional advocate, Rastafari elder, and reform leader. For more than thirty years he has carried a single conviction into the highest courts of the land: that faith, indigenous knowledge, and human dignity are not privileges to be granted, but rights to be defended.

The pillars

Four causes. One constitutional thread.

Religious Freedom

Establishing constitutional protection for Rastafari faith and practice in South African law.

Constitutional Rights

Three decades of litigation extending the reach of dignity, equality, and personal liberty.

Indigenous Rights

Defending the place of indigenous communities in the emerging legal cannabis economy.

Traditional Healing

Advocating cultural recognition of indigenous medicine and traditional knowledge systems.

Gareth Prince on the steps of the High Court of South Africa

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The journey

From a denied admission to a Constitutional Court victory.

In 1997 the Cape Law Society refused to register his community service. In 2018 the Constitutional Court decriminalised private cannabis use for every adult in the country. The road between those two moments is the spine of South African religious-freedom law.

Walk the timeline

In the media

Recent appearances

All media →
eNCA — Cannabis for Private Purposes Bill
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2020 · eNCA · Television interview

eNCA — Cannabis for Private Purposes Bill

On the cannabis & hemp foodstuffs ban
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2025 · Studio interview · Reform commentary

On the cannabis & hemp foodstuffs ban

Support the movement

The litigation continues. So does the work.

The 2026 IKS Sandbox case before the Western Cape High Court is the next chapter — a fight for indigenous farmers, traditional healers, and the communities the legal economy has so far left behind.

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Join the movement.

Court dates. Filings. Reform victories. A short, occasional dispatch.