“My Name Was Hannah Cornelius”
Stellenbosch, Western Cape, May 27, 2017
I remember that night. The quiet of a small university town, the comfort of friendship, the feeling of being young and free. I was 21, studying, dreaming, creating a life full of possibility.
I had a future ahead of me, filled with knowledge, ambition, and hope. I trusted the world around me, believing in safety, in community, in the right to walk freely under the stars. But none of that mattered in the end.
They were strangers — violent, ruthless, and without mercy. They forced their way into my life in a moment meant only for friendship. I was taken, dragged away from everything I knew, while fear replaced the calm I felt before.
There was no warning. No chance to run. I was assaulted, tortured, and silenced. My life ended on a cold roadside, far from safety, far from the dreams I was still forming. Those who did this were arrested and convicted, but justice cannot give back the years I was supposed to live.
I was only 21. I had a family who loved me, a community who supported me, a name that carried so much hope. I was a young woman who believed she could shape her own future. But I was taken, leaving behind heartbreak and a world that feels less safe for every woman.
My name was Hannah Cornelius. I was bright, kind, full of promise.
And I was taken too soon.
Remember me.
What Happened to Hannah Cornelius
On the night of May 26, 2017, Hannah and her friend Cheslin were sitting in her parked car in Stellenbosch.
A group of men approached them and hijacked the vehicle.
Cheslin was beaten and thrown from the car.
He survived and later helped identify what happened.
Hannah was driven away against her will.
She was assaulted, attacked, and robbed.
She was stabbed and stoned to death on a quiet roadside outside town.
Her body was found the next morning.
The men who did this were arrested, tried, and sentenced to long prison terms.
Hannah was 21.
A student.
A daughter.
A friend.
Her life was stolen by brutality — in a place she should have been safe.