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Jo-Anne Reyneke opens up about surviving kidnapping and reclaiming her story

Posted on November 26, 2025
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Facing the Unthinkable

Surviving trauma is one thing. Owning it, retelling it, and transforming it into strength is another. That’s exactly what South African actress Jo-Anne Reyneke did during a heartfelt appearance on The Konvo Show with Penuel “The Black Pen” Mlotshwa.

Before the glitz of red carpets and the acclaim of Netflix hits, Reyneke’s life in Vereeniging was irrevocably altered by a terrifying ordeal: a kidnapping that lasted 19 hours.

“I was quite protected by my mom, empilweni yam,” she said. “Akukho okubi okuningi okwenzeke… other than my kidnapping. Which is not my mom’s fault; that was a crazy man’s fault.”

Her calm, matter-of-fact tone belies the intensity of the event that would shape her resilience and perspective.

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The Night That Changed Everything

A man Reyneke barely knew stalked her relentlessly, driving a distinctive car that friends quickly noticed. One evening, he confronted her with a gun, demanding she enter his vehicle. For nineteen hours, she endured beatings, humiliation, and constant psychological manipulation.

“He kept saying ngimenza islima ngoba ngiyisfebe. And every time I asked Uwubani? (Who are you?) That question would set him off. So I started calling him ‘baby’. ‘I’m sorry, baby.’ Just to survive,” she shared.

Her family eventually found her, but justice was limited: her kidnapper received only 12 months for assault, not kidnapping. Reyneke explained, “I couldn’t prove kidnapping. But for assault.”

Survival with Intent

What sets Reyneke apart is not simply surviving; it’s reclaiming her narrative. Years later, the man who kidnapped her still clings to a delusional version of events, believing she was his girlfriend. Reyneke shrugs it off with humor and a touch of vengeance:

“It’s going to be my second movie, that thing,” she says. “He kidnapped the wrong girl.”

Experts classify such cases as erotomanic stalking, where perpetrators construct imaginary relationships. For Reyneke, however, the delusion does not define her identity.

A New Way to Heal

When asked if sharing her trauma on social media could help others, Reyneke took a nuanced approach. “I think that’s healing. If someone feels the need to share her story, by all means. I’m just not that way. I’d rather make a movie and make money out of it. I don’t want to be associated with victimhood stuff.”

Her message resonates in a country where gender-based violence (GBV) remains a critical issue. According to the South African Medical Research Council (2022), women who report being stalked are at significantly higher risk of physical harm. Reyneke’s story is a testament to resilience, empowerment, and reclaiming agency.

One Woman, Many Lives

Reyneke’s life is a tapestry of roles: daughter, mother, award-winning actress, businesswoman, and storyteller. Raised by a single mother, she never met her father and became a mother herself at 25, all while building a career that spans Mzansi’s most popular TV shows and Netflix hits.

Her appeal lies in authenticity. She is layered, real, and relatable, connecting with audiences through her vulnerability and courage. By turning trauma into art, she offers hope and inspiration to countless South African women navigating fear, oppression, and societal challenges

Strength Beyond Survival

Jo-Anne Reyneke’s journey reminds us that trauma does not define destiny. Fear does not steal voice. Her past, while harrowing, never had a chance against her resolve to thrive.

In sharing her story, she shows that survival is just the beginning—true power comes from reclaiming your narrative, turning pain into purpose, and walking into your light with unwavering grace.

Source: IOL

Featured Image: X{@PhilMphela}

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