Cape Argus

TEACHER’S REMAINS GIVEN DIGNIFIED BURIAL

- KRISTIN ENGEL kristin.engel@inl.co.za

THE remains of Michael Balie, one of the first formally trained South African teachers at the Genadendal Training College in Genadendal, have been taken from the Genadendal Mission Museum and handed over to the community for a dignified and respectful burial.

Provincial Cultural Affairs and Sport MEC Anroux Marais performed the symbolic handover of Balie’s remains on Monday, with the involvemen­t of interested community groups, such as the Board of Trustees of Genadendal Mission Museum, museum manager and great grandson of Balie, Dr Isaac Balie, the South African Heritage Resources Agency, and the Moravian Church of South Africa.

Marais said this was part of their Human Remains Reburial Programme that aims to facilitate a series of reburials of human remains from museums affiliated to the department, as their current department­al Guidelines for the Management and Reinternme­nt of Human Remains and Associated Archaeolog­ical Remains emphasised that museums were not appropriat­e institutio­ns to hold human remains.

The handover was followed by a dignified burial ceremony at the Genadendal Mission Museum conducted by Balie and traditiona­l stakeholde­rs, with a performanc­e by the Genadendal Brass Band as the remains were laid to rest in front of the Herrnhut House.

Balie said the event highlighte­d the fact that Genadendal had the first teacher training college in South Africa, which was never formally acknowledg­ed in the general history of South Africa, and could be found in his book “Genadendal: A Long Walk Through the History of the First Mission Station in South Africa”.

“This was a wonderful opportunit­y for Genadendal to make South Africans who believe the first formally-trained teachers came from elsewhere, aware, through the reburial ceremony, that actually they came from Genadendal. Now their eyes are opened that Michael Balie and his 10 colleagues were the first South Africans (despite skin colour) who were formally trained as teachers in South Africa,” said Balie.

He said the handover and reburial also included the unveiling of a memorial stone in front of the main Museum, in honour of all the pioneer teachers trained in 1838 at the Genadendal Teachers Training College.

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 ?? | JACO MARAIS ?? THE remains of Michael Balie, one of the first formally trained South African teachers at the Genadendal Training College, are given a dignified and respectful burial.
| JACO MARAIS THE remains of Michael Balie, one of the first formally trained South African teachers at the Genadendal Training College, are given a dignified and respectful burial.

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