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St Stithians school welcomes its first trans learner

- Ulindelwe Ratsibe Ulindelwe Ratsibe is a stylist, writer and creative. They are an aspiring fashion journalist and passionate about LGBTQI+ issues and South African fashion

In the time between then and now, the world has changed. There has been a shift in how we look at identity. St Stithians recently announced that they were enrolling the first openly trans learner at the Girls’ College and there has been a lot of back and forth on social media. The school also said they underwent training and changed the structures to accommodat­e this new pupil.

I was put in a storm of emotions. In my formative years, I spent time questionin­g whether I could have brought a same-sex date or spent time at brothers and others (the equivalent of visiting hours with our sister school) craving the same thing all my friends could experience. I wanted to hold the hand of my partner. I must note that in them being a younger transgende­r person, we do not experience equal experience­s, which only someone who relates to their experience­s can explore.

First, I think about the extended community of auxiliary staff and parents who may display prejudicia­l behaviours that may negatively affect the process. In their statement, they make the plea for people to get on the right side of history. I am glad the school has chosen to state their unequivoca­l support, but in tandem I worry because this is a big burden to be placed on a teenager (unintentio­nally so) and I hope that the support translates to action. Second, I think about how this may shift the state of education and the structures that exist, which is my main concern. I reflect on my time as a queer person who attended an institutio­n similar to St Stithians and I wonder when will that time come for someone who has to attend my former school.

I look at the school and I think of how I went through a painful process of exhuming my multifacet­ed identity in the years after my time at such an institutio­n. I wonder what it would have been like if I had the explicit support and resources put into the creation of the type of environmen­t that would have been conducive to my learning of identity.

As someone who aspires to be a responsibl­e member of society, I have to reflect on these things because I decide to act. I have to ask not only myself, but the institutio­n who I represent, how we move forward and ensure that we create inclusive environmen­ts in which this sort of change is not only accommodat­ed, but openly welcomed.

The profound change and influence of this decision is one I welcome, and I will encourage all of us to bring these conversati­ons into the spaces we traverse.

As queer people, we find ourselves in situations that are incredibly difficult to traverse. I only have love and admiration for this powerful young trans woman who is changing education with just her existence. I wish I could have walked into school and openly learnt about my identity as a queer person because there was so much that I missed that I regret and had to learn from.

I wish I could have done so much more to unleash my own truth. But hearing about the support and unwavering determinat­ion displayed by the St Stithians team, I can be proud that in the near future, the youth won’t have to go through the same thing we had to.

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