Cape Argus

It’s transforma­nia – Maties dissenter

Council member sparks row over his contrary stance to university

- Ilse Fredericks EDUCATION WRITER ilse.fredericks@inl.co.za

ASTELLENBO­SCH University council member has found himself at the centre of an uproar over his stance on transforma­tion, which is contrary to the university’s recent commitment to change. It started with a tweet by Piet le Roux, a member of the Stellenbos­ch University council, who is also the convener of the newly formed Afrikaanse Alumni-vereniging, and has caused a row on social media.

Just a few days after the university council told Parliament’s portfolio committee on higher education that it was united on the importance of transforma­tion at the institutio­n, Le Roux tweeted: “Blade Nzimande en #transforma­nie gaan nie wen nie. Ondersteun die Afrikaanse Alumni-vereniging. (Blade Nzimande and transforma­nia won’t win. Support the Afrikaanse Alumni Associatio­n.”

The hashtag #pietleroux­mustfall was started soon after and calls were made on Twitter and Facebook for the university council to be dissolved.

The associatio­n’s website states that “under the banner of transforma­tion” there is an “orchestrat­ed attack on the independen­ce and excellence of the most outstandin­g South African universiti­es”.

Nzimande’s spokesman Khaye Nkwanyana hit back at Le Roux’s tweet by posting: “It is with utmost regret that there are still people like you in SA who have not yet crossed the rubicon of 94.”

He later added: “Minister Nzimande reserves the power to force transforma­tion, haul over coals those resisting it, as a last resort.”

Campus activism body Open Stellenbos­ch, which in May also called for the council to be dissolved, said in a statement on Facebook on Sunday that the “official pro-transforma­tion rhetoric” coming from the management and the university’s corporate marketing division was “clearly at odds with the views of council members such as Piet le Roux, who is unashamedl­y anti-transforma­tion”.

“For Stellenbos­ch University to exist for the benefit of society at large and to be a nondiscrim­inatory, inclusive institutio­n, antitransf­ormation attitudes must go. South African university councils are not meant to be constituen­cy-based bodies and council members are not meant to serve sectional interests as many do at Stellenbos­ch.”

In an e-mail to the Cape Argus, Le Roux, who is also head of Solidarity’s research institute, said he coined in Afrikaans “transforma­nie” to distinguis­h it from transforma­sie (transforma­tion), “which can also be interprete­d positively, depending on what one means by it”.

“For example, one can use the word transforma­tion in the sense of making civil society stronger and halting the state’s racial engineerin­g, as opposed to the case under apartheid. Unfortunat­ely, transforma­tion as driven by the Department of Higher Education, has taken a particular­ly destructiv­e form, under which it is rigidly insisted that every organisati­on in the country, universiti­es included, should reflect the national racial demographi­cs and, by extension, become an English institutio­n,” he said.

“It does nothing for transforma­tion in any positive sense; parades as pro-diversity when, in fact, it insists upon uniformity; and extends the control of the state over civil society in much the same way the National Party government used to extend its control.

“Transforma­nie is the Jimmy Manyi-version of transforma­tion (insisting that coloured people should stop their so-called over-concentrat­ion in the Western Cape), under which radical racial engineerin­g by the

FOR THE UNIVERSITY TO EXIST FOR THE BENEFIT OF SOCIETY AT LARGE AND TO BE A NONDISCRIM­INATORY, INCLUSIVE INSTITUTIO­N, ANTI-TRANSFORMA­TION ATTITUDES MUST GO

state becomes the dominant feature of society, which only serves to take us further away from the diversity and tolerance of a normal society. Dr Nzimande is more circumspec­t than Mr Manyi in his remarks about what his idea of transforma­tion means, but fundamenta­lly Dr Nzimande and Mr Manyi share the same vision of a state-directed society.”

Le Roux said he didn’t speak for the council and his statements were not directed at the situation at Stellenbos­ch in particular, but had been made in response to the general unrest and insistence on “radical transforma­tion” at universiti­es over the country.

“Council at Stellenbos­ch, like all councils and all boards, are often not in agreement on some issues. Neverthele­ss, even when there is disagreeme­nt, councils still have their official positions, and disagreeme­nt by some members do not invalidate those official positions.” He said Nkwanyana and Nzimande appeared to believe that the role of government toward universiti­es “are today in principle different from that under the National Party government”.

“I think it is not as different as they imagine. What is eerily similar is that both this and the previous government interferes very directly in the domain of university autonomy by insisting that government should determine matters of language and race at universiti­es. What is different is only the content of the insistence and the interferen­ce, not the unfortunat­e existence of the interferen­ce itself.”

Stellenbos­ch University spokesman Martin Viljoen confirmed Le Roux was a council member and was one of six members elected by the convocatio­n (which mainly consists of alumni). “Council matters are decided by consensus or a majority vote of the members present. Council overwhelmi­ngly approved the Institutio­nal Intent and Strategy documents in April 2013 and the Institutio­nal Plan documents in December 2014. These documents set out the roadmap for transforma­tion, and the university management is moving forward with the implementa­tion thereof.”

Viljoen said any council member had the prerogativ­e to state a personal opinion, but that didn’t not alter a council decision or derail the university’s committed transforma­tion initiative­s.

 ?? PICTURE: OUPA MOKOENA ?? CONTRARY: Stellenbos­ch University council member Piet le Roux has caused a storm with his controvers­ial tweet.
PICTURE: OUPA MOKOENA CONTRARY: Stellenbos­ch University council member Piet le Roux has caused a storm with his controvers­ial tweet.
 ??  ?? SOCIAL MEDIA STORM: The tweet Piet le Roux posted.
SOCIAL MEDIA STORM: The tweet Piet le Roux posted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa