Saturday Star News

Raise a glass, Mzansi! The Irish started this shebeen thing long ago

Saturday Star Reporter|Published
This St Patrick’s Day, celebrate more than just Guinness. Discover the roots of South Africa’s iconic shebeen, a lively township gathering place inspired by the Irish síbín. Once a secret spot for home-brewed whiskey, shebeens today are all about community, music, dancing, gossip, and a hint of mischief. From Dublin to Jozi, the spirit of the síbín lives on.

This St Patrick’s Day, celebrate more than just Guinness. Discover the roots of South Africa’s iconic shebeen, a lively township gathering place inspired by the Irish síbín. Once a secret spot for home-brewed whiskey, shebeens today are all about community, music, dancing, gossip, and a hint of mischief. From Dublin to Jozi, the spirit of the síbín lives on.

Image: AI generated

This St Patrick’s Day, raise a glass not just to Guinness, but to the word behind South Africa’s favourite unlicensed hangout: the shebeen.

Its roots? The Irish síbín, a cheeky little term for secret spots selling home-brewed whiskey when taxes or laws said “nope.” Back then, drinking legally was basically a fantasy, so the Irish improvised.

It is widely accepted that Irish settlers brought the word síbín to South Africa, where it evolved into the township shebeen we know today.

Fast forward a few centuries and a few continents, and locals took the idea, swapped whiskey for whatever was on tap, and added music, dancing, gossip, and a healthy dose of township energy.

Today, shebeens are still all about community, social life - and, yes, a bit of mischief.

So this March 17, whether you’re in Dublin sipping pints or in Jozi raising one at a shebeen, remember: the spirit of síbín lives on. Sneaky, spirited, and slightly illegal, just the way a good party should be.