The Citizen (KZN)

Sex abuse in elite schools

DOCU-SERIES: TEACHERS PREYING ON PUPILS MAY BE OVERLOOKED TO PROTECT INSTITUTIO­NS Young suicide victims’ parents speak out so others can be protected.

- Citizen reporter

On top of the varying degrees of bullying, substance abuse, verbal abuse, racism, gangsteris­m, guns and weapons and vandalism, South Africa’s schoolchil­dren are experienci­ng rampant sexual abuse and grooming – largely at the hands of those who are in charge of their care and education at school.

In 2019, the South African Council of Educators recorded 122 cases of sexual abuse of pupils by teachers – noting that two out of three cases are unreported.

School Ties is a ground-breaking and harrowing four-part documentar­y series about the grooming and sexual abuse of pupils at some of South Africa’s most prominent, prestigiou­s boys’ schools.

It comes to M-Net channel 101 on 16 May at 9pm.

While virtually all schools in the country will grapple with sexual misconduct at some point, abuse that happens in the most prestigiou­s schools tends to be well hidden and therefore perpetrato­rs get away with it for many years – leaving many harmed children in their wake.

Produced by Devilsdop, Steinheist and Convict Conman producers Idea Candy, the docuseries series uncovers the truth behind grooming and abuse in schools across the country, the aftermath and what government, schools and society are doing to stop it in its tracks.

The four episodes tackle one case at a time.

The suicide of 16-year-old Thomas Kruger after an allegedly inappropri­ate relationsh­ip with the school’s charismati­c water polo coach, another water polo coach caught on surveillan­ce camera abusing boys in his care at a school where the silence was maintained for too long.

The series also explores Julio Mordoh’s suicide a decade after allegedly experienci­ng abuse from his own school sports coach and the discovery of a previously convicted water polo coach who was located working with children at a holiday camp in the UK.

Rather than sensationa­lising the details, the series focuses on expert interviews with child protection experts to help parents identify tell-tale signs of sexual abuse in their children, unpacks the history of elite institutio­ns that in many cases acts as a breeding ground for these behaviours and speaks to the law enforcemen­t team involved in investigat­ing the wide-ranging abuse that occurs at schools across the country.

“In creating School Ties, there’s no desire to simply create moral panic, but rather to highlight an urgent issue. Nobody can change the psychology of predators and those who engage in the grooming of children.

“However, our hope in sharing these very personal accounts is to create a space where children, parents, educators and schools have the informatio­n to identify the possible scenarios where inappropri­ate behaviour might take place before it happens, and to feel empowered to strengthen their systems as much as possible,” said producer Wim Steyn.

Series director Richard Finn Gregory said that the docuseries was incredibly harrowing to make, because the accounts of abuse are so hard to hear – but that there are also stories of hope and resilience in the face of unimaginab­le tragedy that must be told.

“We met survivors of abuse who found the inner fortitude and courage to speak out. We spent time with child protection experts who work with cases of sexual assault and grooming all day long, and yet find the will to get up every morning and do it again, in their efforts to make a difference.

“And we spoke to parents whose children had taken their own lives, and yet they refused to let this experience crush them.

“They chose to speak out about their children’s lives, so that their passing will not be in vain and other boys can be protected from abuse,” he said.

 ?? Pictures: Supplied ?? TELEVISION
Pictures: Supplied TELEVISION

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