Eastern Eye (UK)

Praise as Roedean acts to ‘decolonise’ syllabus

CURRICULUM SHOULD REFLECT SHARED HISTORY, SAYS AUTHOR AND ACTIVIST ZERBANOO GIFFORD

- By AMIT ROY

BLACK and Asian history is to be taught at Roedean, one of Britain’s top public schools for girls, its headmaster, Oliver Blond, has said.

This radical step has been warmly welcomed by the Indian-origin author and human rights activist, Zerbanoo Gifford.

She was at Roedean herself from 1962-67 but regrets that she left without learning anything about her own heritage. In an interview with Eastern Eye, she described Blond as an “exceptiona­l and very progressiv­e headmaster”.

Blond explained: “We wanted to challenge the predominan­tly western European narrative and to look beyond the limitation­s of Britain’s ‘island story’, to discover hidden histories both nationally and internatio­nally.nally.

“The question was raised as to whether everyone in the Roedean community saw themselves in the history they study at school. To this end, more diverse perspectiv­es have been incorporat­ed within the existing programme in order to challenge preconcept­ions and stimulate debate.”

The headmaster added: “We hope that some of this passion to rediscover the past both at home and around the world will inspire the pupils towards a deeper love of history and equip them with a greater appreciati­on of diverse experience­s and a desire to continue their historical journey beyond the classroom.”

Roedean said in a statement: “This year’s Black Lives Matter protests which followed the death of George Floyd in the US has prompted schools to review their syllabus. Roedean has aimed to broaden its geographic­al focus and offer more diverse, enquiry-led teaching to develop more independen­t thinking and depth of knowledge.”

From now on, pupils will be taught not only about the trans-Atlantic slave trade, but also about “Indian and Caribbean experience­s in both world wars” and such pioneers as Sake Dean Mahomed, who is “credited with introducin­g Indian cuisine to Europe”.

They will learn about the use of the Brighton Pavilion as a hospital where the Indian wounded were cared for during the First World War.

The girls will also be taught about a historic site very close to Roedean, a school for 700 pupils occupying 118 acres on the Sussex Downs. This is the Indian-style Chattri Memorial, built in 1921 to mark the spot where funeral pyres of Hindu and Sikh soldiers burned (Muslim casualties were taken for burial to a cemetery in Woking).

Zerbanoo Irani was three when her Parsi parents brought her to England. Her forefather­s, like many from the Zoroastria­n faith, had fled persecutio­n in Persia for sanctuary in India.

Roedean, establishe­d in 1885 and with the motto Honneur aulx dignes – French for “Honour the worthy” – was picked for her “because it was internatio­nally renowned as the best school in the world for girls.

“It had the added bonus that it is isolated, on top of the hill near Brighton, designed like Colditz from where you could not escape,” she joked. “The sea air was bracing.

“My parents were keen on single-sex schools and admired the feminist ethos that girls should be independen­t and do everything they aspired to.”

She said: “History was my passion, but I knew nothing about Indian history. I knew nothing about Dadabhai Naoroji.”

Only later when she stood successful­ly for a council seat in Harrow as a Liberal in 1982 did she realise that Naoroji and two other Parsis – Mancherjee Bhownaggre­e and Shapurji Saklatvala – had been the first Asian MPs in the Commons.

Nor did she know anything about Noor Inayat Khan, who served in the Special Operations Executive during the Second World War and was executed by the Nazis.

She said: “We learnt English history, the First World War and about Napoleon.”

Gifford has fond memories of her history teachers. “One was Miss Weaver – she was an absolutely extraordin­ary woman, very, very strict. We were totally discipline­d by her. But it was Tudor history.

“We didn’t know that there were blacks who were trumpeters in Henry VIII’s entourage. We certainly didn’t know that Queen Victoria had a goddaughte­r who was black.”

She doesn’t think her teachers “knew about them either”.

Gifford added: “What I felt about Roedean education was that it taught you to be adventurou­s and open minded, and gave you the ability to do the research myself. So there must have been a spark lit in me.”

She remembered: “I was one of the very few foreigners, a rare breed. And now, Roedean is totally multicultu­ral.”

Having discovered her history, Gifford has written several books, including a biography of Naoroji and The Golden Thread:

Asian Experience­s of Post-Raj Britain. She argues that it is important for impression­able young people to “understand the influence Britain has had for good and bad – and there is good.”

Gifford, who has been a director of AntiSlaver­y Internatio­nal, is also the author of Thomas Clarkson and the Campaign against Slavery.

“Thomas Clarkson was, for me, one of the greatest Englishmen that ever lived,” she said. “What he did was work to end one of the most barbaric institutio­ns that helped to build the wealth of Britain – the monstrous trans-Atlantic slave trade. Slavery is now is a huge issue – Black Lives Matter.

“I think schools have to take this into their curriculum. The world has changed since I was at Roedean more than 50 years ago. The world moved on – and schools must move on. It isn’t about reclaiming our BAME history, but our shared history.”

Gifford, who now runs the Asha Centre in Gloucester­shire to provide “transforma­tive, holistic education” for young people, is married to the eminent solicitor, Richard Gifford, who has waged a long battle on behalf of the original residents of the Cha

gos Islands in the Indian Ocean. They were forcibly removed by the UK government in 1971 to enable constructi­on of the US Air Force base at Diego Garcia.

Gifford believes a broader history education can help to reduce racial tensions.

She recalls one particular racist telephone call which “always sticks in my mind” when she stood in the 1982 council election: “He was highly educated; I could tell from his voice. He was absolutely insistent that I ‘didn’t fight in the war’. He was abusing me and telling me to go home and do politics in my own country.

“I said, ‘Look, I was born in 1950, but my uncle fought in the war.’ And then I told him about the contributi­on Asians had made to the war effort. No other country in the world had done as much for another country. And about how Noor Inayat Khan had died fighting fascism. We talked for about two hours on the phone.

“He said to me, ‘I wasn’t taught this school. I thought you were all spongers.’

“And I said, ‘Your curriculum let you down,’ and he understood that. And he said, ‘I’m sorry.’ So he apologised to me. The curriculum had let everybody down.”

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 ??  ?? LEARNING LESSONS: Zerbanoo Gifford; (left) her biography of pioneering Asian MP Dadabhai Naoroji; and (above left) Oliver Blond with Roedean students
LEARNING LESSONS: Zerbanoo Gifford; (left) her biography of pioneering Asian MP Dadabhai Naoroji; and (above left) Oliver Blond with Roedean students
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