The Star Early Edition

Disappoint­ment at verbal attack on Model C schools

- Tim Gordon

IT WAS probably more in sorrow and disappoint­ment than in anger that the Governing Body Foundation noted the verbal attacks on Model C schools by presidenti­al hopeful Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma and KZN MEC for Education, Mthandeni Dlungwana.

They have complained that these schools are teaching pupils that “the ANC is corrupt and useless”, and offering “a distorted version of history”.

If there was any truth in the accusation­s, why did Dlamini Zuma – herself a parent who chose to place her daughters at one of these schools and who was a powerful minister in the ANC government at the time – not do anything about it when she had a child being exposed to such supposed abuses?

And what are the grounds and evidence on which these sudden accusation­s are based?

Of course, Dlamini Zuma is not the only political or educationa­l luminary to choose a Model C school to educate her offspring. Many – politician­s, top educationa­l officials and other societal leaders – have done so, and continue to do so. And their children, like numberless other children of ordinary South Africans, have benefited from the education on offer in these schools.

Many have emerged as top-of-the-pile role-players in leadership positions in politics, economics, business or sport. The schools not only lead the education pack locally, but are competitiv­e players in many arenas on the world stage.

The Model Cs have for the past quarter century been critical social and educationa­l laboratori­es for the rainbow nation, one of the few places where youngsters from a variety of racial,

cultural, social, religious, economic, political and other background­s, have been able to meet, work, play, debate and live side-byside, learning to understand one another and from each other, competing on relatively level playing fields, and making lifelong friends across the barriers of society.

It is a sad day indeed when politickin­g so cheapens itself that it chooses these leading schools as a battlefiel­d on which matters that have little to do with education are to be fought.

But perhaps even more disturbing are the implicit threats from officialdo­m to interfere with teaching and the curriculum to undermine the progress so evident in these schools.

There is no small irony in the decision by the KZN Education MEC to “prescribe” a film about Struggle hero Solomon Mahlangu for schools in his province, to correct the ills he has reportedly espied.

Last year, in a number of workshops with member schools, the foundation highlighte­d the actions of the selfsame Mahlangu, a youngster from the 1970s Mamelodi who, as a teenager post the Soweto Uprising, joined Umkhonto we Sizwe, got embroiled in the movement of arms during which two civilians were killed, for which he was subsequent­ly tried and executed.

The difference is that we took a lead from the work of UFS Rector Jonathan Jansen and compared his actions with those of 1890s Afrikaner teenager JP van der Merwe who, in the light of the scorched earth policy, farm burnings and concentrat­ion camp atrocities of his time, joined the Boer commandos, fought on their side, and was later captured, tried and executed. Our intent was to show the extent to which our history is mired in mirror images of so many South African stories, and we suggested that it was incumbent on schools to ensure that both were recognised.

They are competitiv­e on the world stage

National CEO, Governing Body Foundation

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