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"If a blade of
grass springing up in the fields has power to move you . . . rejoice, for your
soul is alive." - Eleonora Duse
AFTERMATH OF APARTHEID
IN SOUTH AFRICAN EDUCATION
At the 2003 World Forum in Acapulco, Mexico, Patsy Pillay, the
Vice Chair of the South African Congress in Early Childhood Education addressed
some of the challenges in upgrading early childhood education in South Africa.
One of the hurdles she described was the result of over four decades of
discrimination, inequality and exclusion in the African educational system under
apartheid. According to Pillay:
"Christian National Education was imposed in South Africa in the mid-1940's.
It was an education system consistent with the social reality of an exclusionary
right to knowledge. It was therefore the foundation on which the apartheid
system was established. . .The sentiments [below] shaped the education system
for the next forty years:
"'When I have control of National Education I will reform it in that the
Natives will be taught from childhood to realize that equality with Europeans
is not for them. . .people who believe in equality are not desirable teachers
for Natives. . .When my department controls Native education it will know for
what class higher education a Native is fitted, and whether he will have a chance
in life to use his knowledge. . .What is the use of teaching a Bantu child mathematics
when he cannot use it in practice? This is quite absurd.' -- Speech by
Dr. Vervoerd, Minister of Native Affairs, 1954."
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