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‘School Ties’ aims to make difference in fight against sexual abuse of youth

- KARISHMA DIPA karishma.dipa@inl.co.za

RICHARD Gregory and his team were determined to bring the new M-net documentar­y series School Ties to life because, as parents, they felt a sense of responsibi­lity to address the sexual abuse scandals which have rocked the nation’s school system.

“For the team working on this, being parents ourselves, we realised that we have many challenges in the South African education landscape, one of these being the uncomforta­ble and sensitive matter of abuse that many would prefer to shy away from,” the director told Independen­t Media’s Lifestyle.

“However, it is specifical­ly this that motivated us to get on board, to challenge the status quo by unpacking a few cases in South African schools.”

School Ties, which premiered on M-net on Thursday, is a harrowing four-part documentar­y series that centres on the grooming and sexual abuse of learners at some of the country’s most prestigiou­s boys’ schools.

The director said the purpose of the documentar­y was to inspire change and to prevent more youngsters from being abused.

“Our main focus is to empower parents, scholars, educators and schools with knowledge of how this occurs, and how to prevent it in the hope that we can push for change in a system that is, at times, simply broken,” he said.

“As a production team, we had noticed that reports of grooming and abuse in schools kept on cropping up periodical­ly, with distressin­g similariti­es and that it’s not something that you can just ignore.”

School Ties is produced by Ideacandy, who gave us Devilsdorp, Steinheist and Convict Conman. As the documentar­y aims to safeguard learners at schools, it offers insight from experts on children’s rights, child protection and other legal,

psychologi­cal and law enforcemen­t areas. This includes feedback from Deon Wiggett, the author of My Only Story: The Hunt for a Serial Paedophile.

Other experts interviewe­d include Childline South Africa CEO, Dumisile Nala, and Child Protection and Developmen­t specialist, Luke Lamprecht.

The first episode explores the suicide of 16-year-old Thomas Kruger on the grounds of the prestigiou­s St Andrew’s College in Grahamstow­n.

Episode two delves into how a former Parktown Boys’ High School

educator normalised violent and sexual behaviour in the boarding house and the pool. Child protection activist and journalist Robyn Wolfson Vorster offers her insights.

In the penultimat­e episode, clinical psychologi­st Marita Rademeyer explains how Julio Murdoh and numerous other boys were allegedly abused by a coach at St John’s College in Houghton, Johannesbu­rg.

The School Ties finale analyses the investigat­ion into a ring of school coaches accused of sex offences.

The probe, dubbed “Operation Nemo” was led by SAPS Colonel Heila Niemand, who lent her insights to the documentar­y.

Gregory said School Ties was a “sobering reality” for him as he realised that “predators are more common than you would think”.

“They will find victims, no matter how safe you feel your home, school and general environmen­t is,” he said.

“They usually look just like us and they are able to get away with what they do because they are charismati­c and clever.”

Gregory also understand­s that when it comes to the grooming and sexual abuse of learners, parents and caregivers might feel urged to remove their children from school to keep them safe.

“But that is not a realistic way of solving a problem that all South Africans face,” he said.

“We quickly realised that the key was to take on the learnings from the cases we researched, which gave us a lot of the answers we needed on how to improve the safety of our children.”

Gregory said that while putting the documentar­y together, he and his team were confronted with “heartbreak­ing realities in discussion­s with parents who have lost their children”.

“It was difficult material to deal with, but they managed to turn their grief into lessons that can help activists, police and schools navigate this terrain and for that we can only admire them because even a small victory in this space is a big one.”

Gregory hoped that School Ties would make “life difficult for perpetrato­rs to get away with heinous actions”.

“On a wider level, we want to challenge the systems in place in our schools as well as in the educationa­l and legal systems, so that they can take a hard look at themselves and find places to improve their protocols.”

He stressed that they had no desire to break down the schools that were featured in the documentar­y.

“We’re talking about some of the finest educationa­l institutio­ns in our country and nothing changes that, but they could do even better when it comes to protecting kids.

“We hope to stimulate the kind of collaborat­ion between parents, schools and educationa­l bodies that can make a meaningful difference.”

* Watch School Ties on Thursdays on M-net (Dstv channel 101) at 9pm.

 ?? Features on School Ties. | Supplied ?? DEON Wiggett, the author of
My Only Story: The Hunt for a Serial Paedophile,
Features on School Ties. | Supplied DEON Wiggett, the author of My Only Story: The Hunt for a Serial Paedophile,

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