The Herald (South Africa)

‘Decolonisi­ng’ gains ground

- Athena O’Reilly oreillya@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

In light of a worldwide movement around decolonisi­ng Eurocentri­c institutio­ns and barriers, Nelson Mandela University students have made one thing clear – they aim to tackle the mammoth task of breaking down centuries of a European-injected academic curriculum.

This was put on the table during a public discussion on Tuesday by Melz Owusu, a PhD candidate at Leeds University in the UK, in which she created a platform for a conversati­on – Decolonisi­ng the Academy: A Movement Without Borders.

Owusu – who is a leader in the “Why is my curriculum white?” initiative at Leeds, which challenges “the racist colonial education” at British universiti­es – said this could be the starting point in trying to dismantle the only way of learning.

“We need to allow room for young people to open their minds, we need to work together to take down the ivory tower of colonialis­ed academia,” she said.

“The problem we face, however, is that the world we live in is driven by Eurocentri­c ideas and thoughts, and trying to escape that is difficult – and because of this, the problem will always be there.

“It is a daily struggle because the world we live in was not created to serve the black person.”

Owusu said that while the movement is still in its infancy, there is no real explanatio­n as to what a decolonise­d university means.

“Knowledge produced through feelings, emotions and spirituali­ty is relegated to almost fictitious status and it is therefore imperative to our struggle that we must decolonise our own imaginatio­ns and strive to imagine the unthinkabl­e, the impossible, the revolution­ary.

“To look back from our ideologies, spirituali­ty and traditions and to learn from the past what we can take forward in our struggle to decolonise our institutio­ns and ourselves.

“However, we must ensure we take the proper care when doing this.

“Revolution and resistance must be reimagined – that will cause us to value these faculties and reopen paths of knowledge creation that are not validated under Eurocentri­c presiding systems.

“I often find myself flickering between believing universiti­es must be abolished and hope that decolonisa­tion can indeed be achieved within universiti­es.

“To be honest, my answer to this question is that I simply do not know yet, but all we can do is try the latter, continue to struggle within and against our institutio­ns until we see real structural change being achieved.”

BCom Law student Nangamso Nxumalo, 23, said during the discussion that this struggle had been highlighte­d at NMU by the #FeesMustFa­ll movement – a student-led protest movement that began in mid-October 2015 in SA.

The goals of the movement were to stop increases in student fees as well as to increase government funding of universiti­es.

“As someone who is deeply invested in decolonisi­ng, I feel there has been a progressio­n since the #FeesMustFa­ll movement in carving a way forward,” she said.

“We are very structured in how we think about decolonisa­tion, and there are mainly three things we need to look at – the institutio­nal culture of a university, the academics and curriculum within the teachings, and how to change the curriculum.

“I feel that we are only but scraping the surface and yet we are not interrogat­ing real aspects of what this could potentiall­y be.”

Owusu said it was up to the students to drive a new narrative and challenge the academia they were being presented with as a gateway into this form of activism.

‘The world we live in was not created to serve the black person’ Melz Owusu

LEEDS UNIVERSITY PHD CANDIDATE

 ?? Picture: BRIAN WITBOOI ?? IMAGINE THE UNTHINKABL­E: Melz Owusu, who is doing a PhD in Social Theory at the University of Leeds, speaks at NMU’s South Campus
Picture: BRIAN WITBOOI IMAGINE THE UNTHINKABL­E: Melz Owusu, who is doing a PhD in Social Theory at the University of Leeds, speaks at NMU’s South Campus

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa