Sowetan

Schooling in the past for girls

- Tshehleb@sowetan.co.za

A 15-YEAR-old girl sits on a chair outside her 18-year-old boyfriend’s home in Mareetsane village, North West.

She is taking a breather from her daughter who was born three months ago.

The girl, like many others from Maseanyane­ng section, did not return to school this year after realising that she was pregnant. She was in Grade 4 last year.

Her mother died when she was four and she was raised by relatives.

But when she fell pregnant, she moved in with her boyfriend and his family.

The baby’s father, also a school dropout, does piece jobs.

“I want to go back to school next year, but I do not know who is going to take care of my child,” she said.

In the same section, a heavily pregnant 16-year-old is basking in the sun.

She did not want to talk much about who made her pregnant, but said it was an older man.

Her aunt said: “I am used to this. It’s a norm in this village. Her sister also had two children and left them with me. She went to Johannesbu­rg to seek employment.” A 19-year-old girl is pregnant with her third child. Her other children are aged four and five.

She said she used the threeyear family planning injection after her second baby.

“It did not work. I told the nurses at the clinic who took me to the hospital for an ultrasound and it was discovered that I am indeed pregnant.”

She said the children’s father worked at a nearby farm.

“He does not give me a lot of money, but the little he has.”

None of the girls nor their parents and guardians have opened statutory rape or rape cases.

In another house, a 16-year-old girl is a mother to four children.

Sowetan could not find anyone when we visited the tiny hut. It was unlocked and the door was open. Inside was a dirty mattress on the floor with a few clothes and blankets on it.

A neighbour said: “The girl always asks me for porridge. She is 16 and has four children. Her disabled mother has five children.”

It was not known whether this family received social grants.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa