The Citizen (KZN)

Afrikaans residences defy request for inclusivit­y

- Virginia Keppler

The management of Sonop and De Goede Hoop residences, the Afrikaans majority-white residences hosting mostly University of Pretoria students, will not make any changes despite allegation­s they are not inclusive of other races and languages.

A Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communitie­s investigat­ion of De Goede Hoop last year found that it was a white-only Afrikaans residence.

It was thus not representa­tive of all the demographi­cs of South African society.

The commission recommende­d that the residence’s admission committee represent all the demographi­cs of SA society; that the commission should help to appoint members of the admission committee and that the Afrikaans essay as part of the applicatio­n for residence should be scrapped.

But Kallie Kriel, AfriForum CEO and chairperso­n of the board of De Goede Hoop, said the commission had exceeded their powers and that the recommenda­tions would not be implemente­d at the residences.

“It seems that transforma­tion means you have to be exclusivel­y

It seems that transforma­tion means you have to be exclusivel­y English. Kallie Kriel Chairperso­n of the board

English.

“Sonop has a dual language policy,” he added.

University spokespers­on Rikus Delport said De Goede Hoop was not registered as a private residence with the university.

The university has decided to exclude students in the residences from all university activities, including the upcoming 1nSync and Rag events.

Regarding this, Kriel said: “We have already started our own rugby tournament and other sports and we are all-inclusive.”

The commission’s investigat­ion was set in motion when social activist Yusuf Abramjee complained in March 2017 that: “The institutio­n’s criteria are intended to exclude members of other races who are not Afrikaans speakers.

“Other than writing an applicatio­n for residence, each applicant must write an Afrikaans essay wherein the student must state why he or she should be considered.”

Abramjee said only Christian applicants were considered and that the admission criteria did not contribute to nation-building and social cohesion.

Chairperso­n of the commission Thoko Mkhwanazi-Xaluva said they conducted a site inspection on November 24 last year.

They found that “only white people were resident in De Goede Hoop and there was no person of any other colour”.

But Kriel said that at the time of the commission’s visit most of the students in the residence had already gone home for the holiday.

He added: “The commission also just wanted to speak to one coloured student and excluded other students.”

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