The Citizen (Gauteng)

Gauteng in ‘war on Afrikaans’

119 SCHOOLS MADE ENGLISH ONLY: GAUTENG HELL-BENT TO WEED OUT TAAL IN CLASS

- Virginia Keppler virginiak@citize.co.za

The Gauteng government appears hell-bent on weeding out Afrikaans as a language of instructio­n in schools.

The department is ignoring the law and internatio­nal best practice, says the ATKV’s CEO.

The Gauteng government appears hell-bent on weeding out Afrikaans as a language of instructio­n in schools in the province. It has converted 119 schools which were either Afrikaans-medium or dual-medium to English-medium. Many of these schools were in coloured areas around the province, where Afrikaans is a dominant language and culture.

According to statistics from the office of Gauteng education department MEC Panyaza Lesufi, only eight former Afrikaans medium schools, three in Pretoria, three in Johannesbu­rg, one in Krugersdor­p and one in Springs, were converted to English-medium schools.

Lesufi’s statistics further showed that a total of 43 dual-medium schools in coloured areas were converted to English-medium schools. A total of 16 of these schools are situated in the coloured area Eldorado Park.

The department stated that a total of 110 dual-medium schools were changed to English-medium schools. However, Lesufi’s office refused to say how many of these schools were converted from Afrikaans only to dual-medium schools before being made English only.

Doctor Danny Titus, CEO: corporate affairs at the Afrikaanse Taal- en Kultuurver­eniging (ATKV), said these changes by the department are against the spirit of the constituti­on which states that: “Everyone has the right to receive education in the official language or languages of their choice in public educationa­l institutio­ns where that education is reasonably practicabl­e.”

Titus said these changes are also against the spirit of the National Education Policy Act.

“Those double-medium schools gave access to pupils in a previously marginalis­ed community.

“With the change to English only medium schools in predominan­tly Afrikaans-speaking areas, the department is denying the Afrikaans speaking pupils the right to mother tongue education.

“This does not ‘redress the results of past racially discrimina­tory laws and practices. On the contrary, it reinforces discrimina­tion on the basis of language,” Titus said.

He said the ATKV supports “the internatio­nal principal that mother tongue education is the best form of education and, unfortunat­ely, the department does not follow internatio­nal best practice in this regard”.

According to Titus the department has to take responsibi­lity for their actions that are clearly not in line with internatio­nal policies, national acts and best practices.

AfriForum’s deputy CEO Alana Bailey said these statistics are “shocking”.

“It goes to show that dual-medium and parallel-medium schools eventually ends in English only medium schools.

“In a conversati­on earlier this month between MEC Lesufi, AfriForum CEO Kallie Kriel and Danie Brink from Helpende Hand, Lesufi denied he had a mandate to convert all schools to English-medium schools. Schools should only be more integrated, was his assertion,” Bailey said.

She said in 2016 and 2017 they had been involved in a parallel medium primary school, which, according to the demographi­cs of the area, had enough Afrikaans entries to convert back to Afrikaans-medium. The department did everything to stop it. The school remained parallel-medium,” Bailey said.

Bailey said it is a fact that the department is not doing enough to inform parents about the advantages to teach their children in their mother tongue. –

It is a fact that the department is not doing enough to inform parents about the advantages to teach their children in their mother tongue. Alana Bailey AfriForum deputy CEO

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