Sunday Times

Dealing with government ‘depressing’-- archbishop

- BONGANI MTHETHWA

CONTRASTS: Inanda Seminary in Durban in its glory days, when it was a revered place of learning. Today, it is desperatel­y in need of renovation AN archbishop has been left depressed by government red tape that is frustratin­g his project to restore more than 50 historic high schools.

Anglican Archbishop Emeritus Njongonkul­u Ndungane has led a pilot project of 11 schools since 2006. Today he feels “frustrated and depressed” by government apathy.

The Department of Basic Education did not respond to questions from the Sunday Times.

Some of the schools educated several African notables, among them Nelson Mandela, Albert Luthuli, Pius Langa, Seretse Khama and Milton Obote, the first leader of an independen­t Uganda.

Among the schools are Ohlange High and Inanda Seminary in Durban; Morris Isaacson High in Soweto; Healdtown Comprehens­ive near Fort Beaufort in the Eastern Cape; Tiger Kloof in North West; Inkamana High School in Vryheid, northern KwaZulu-Natal; and Adams College near Amanzimtot­i, where there has been some progress.

Ndungane said dealing with the government had left him as battered as some of the institutio­ns.

A single exception is Healdtown Comprehens­ive, Mandela’s old school. The school, for which R100-million was budgeted, was given funding of R3.5million last year.

Ndungane described the task as herculean. “This laudable project has not been without its challenges,” he said.

“There are exciting possibilit­ies and the dream to turn these great institutio­ns into highcalibr­e HEYDAY: Adams College near Amanzimtot­i in its early years SOME PROGRESS: Adams College principal Thulani Khumalo

Infrastruc­ture aside, the right teachers needed to be in place to stimulate partnershi­ps with alumni, business and the government.

“Accessing money for each school is clearly difficult,” Ndungane said.

“As a result we have broken down the project in each case into phases. The budget was to have come from government, the private sector and alumni, FRUSTRATED: Anglican Archbishop Emeritus Njongonkul­u Ndungane says a lack of government commitment is defeating a project to restore historic schools but obviously this has not happened.”

He said there had been some progress at Tiger Kloof and Inanda Seminary.

Plans to restore Ohlange High have come to nothing.

The school was founded by the ANC’s first president, John Langalibal­ele Dube, in 1901. Today Ohlange High is a shadow of a once proud institutio­n.

It was modelled on Tuskegee University, a black university in Alabama, in the US, which Dube visited.

Mandela cast his vote at Ohlange High in the first democratic elections in 1994.

The principal, Siyanda Nxumalo, said there were huge cracks in some classroom walls.

He said the entire school needed to be rebuilt, which would cost R50-million.

Inanda headmistre­ss Judy Tate said the school’s infrastruc­ture was a “mixture of rundown and some new” that needed ongoing repair.

Morris Isaacson High principal Steven Khanyile said little had changed since 1976, when the school was the epicentre of the Soweto uprising.

Isabel Steenkamp, the principal of Inkamana High School, praised the project’s “very positive input”.

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Picture: RUTH COGGIN
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Picture: ROGAN WARD
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Picture: JACKIE CLAUSEN
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