Mail & Guardian

History’s crucial lessons

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The department of education’s plan to make history compulsory for every learner throughout their schooling career is to be applauded. In a country that is still so unsettled by its myriad selves, still struggling to reconcile what must be mutually complement­ary pieces of its personalit­y, that knowledge of self has to be rooted in what has gone before.

The recent brouhaha around the renaming of Cape Town

Internatio­nal Airport is a case in point. Some fairly ignorant arguments have been offered in the public debate about the renaming. In support of a crass attempt at tribalism and at renaming the airport Krotoa, the Gatvol Capetonian Movement, saying they were descendant­s of the

Khoi, took aim at Xhosa people, whom they claim to have preceded as inhabitant­s of the Cape.

A cursory look at history would have informed them that Xhosa people have as much claim to be descendant­s of Khoi people as any other socalled indigenous Capetonian­s, and would likely have remained there en masse save for discrimina­tory imperial and apartheid legislatio­n.

If left to random forces, some with nefarious intentions, our history is likely to be corrupted, used to wage a war against us, the products of that history. And in that corruption we will again facilitate further theft of a large part of the self that belongs to each and every South African and African who lives in this country.

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