Sunday, 17 June 2012
For Hector Pieterson and the 16 June Children of Soweto
The entire continent of Africa celebrates the International Day of the African Child
on June 16, every year. This day has been celebrated since 1991, when it was
first initiated by the then Organization of African Unity (now the African
Union). The Day was established in honour of all those who participated in the
Soweto Uprising of June 16, 1976. It also raises awareness of the continuing
need for improvement of the education provided to African Children. But 36
years after the Soweto Uprising and 21 years after the International Day of the
African Child was first celebrated we Africans need to ask our leaders some
pertinent and radical questions because it appears that the force that the
children of Soweto fought against is still alive and kicking today.
On the fateful June 16, 1976, about ten thousand black
children peacefully marched in a column more than half a mile long in
protesting against the poor quality of their education and demanding their right
to be taught in their own language. But the apartheid South African Government
forces opened gunfire on these innocent souls, killing some and injuring many
in the process. Hundreds more were killed and more than a thousand injured in
the two-week protests that followed this brutal June 16 police action. Hector
Pieterson (see image), who was the first to be killed, remains the most famous
of these courageous African children.
First victim: Lifeless Hector Pieterson is carried by a sympathetic teenager |
But if Hector Pieterson rose from the dead today, would he be
contented that his blood has yielded the intended fruits? The honest answer
remains a loud no, just like it was in 1991 when the day was first celebrated.
Today the standard of education remains poor in most African countries and the
majority of African children are still alienated in institutions of learning which are
meant to serve them. African schools have never been friendly to the child and
our education continues to serve the interests of political leaders and not the
children for whom it is designed. In this 21st Century, our children
continue to have a cosmetic representation in curriculum development forums
even though they have a direct interest in education. The concept of inclusive education is very strange to Africa and there are very few
schools on the continent, which offer the child friendly Montessori type of education.
Take me to a country where education services are offered in
the best interest of the child and I will take you to African schools where
learners are forced to converse in English or French only, although these are
not their mother languages. Learners get punished for seeking clarification of
a scholarly point in their own mother language. This means that learners will
have to fight a two-front war in order to acquire knowledge; they have to
grapple with the second language all the time before wrestling with the concept
at hand. Believe you me, they will always come second class to those who are
taught in their mother language. Isn’t this the very thing the children of
Soweto fought against?
I am not saying that our education should be in vernacular,
but our teachers should ensure that the learners are able to understand the
concepts well. They can communicate in vernacular if they want to drive a point
home. Remember, teaching and learning just like any communication process has
to be dynamic and complete. Today I pay a belated homage to Pieterson and all
the 16 June Children of Soweto, but my heart grieves upon realizing that their
rebellion and eventual deaths have been taken for granted. May the souls of
these courageous children of the African soil rest in eternal peace.
Below I have published my poem which I recited as a student
at Civo Stadium in Lilongwe, Malawi, during the fourth celebration of the
International Day of the African Child. You will find out that the issues
addressed in the poem are as fresh as they were in 1994.
African Child
Wake up
African Child.
The sun
is peeping
through
the window
of your
dark cubbyhole.
Wake up
African Child.
For how
long will you sleep in a coma
with
dreams of better days
hidden
inside your pillow?
Wake up African
Child.
Bask in
the warm glow of education
to arm
yourself with confidence
as the
going gets tough.
Wake up African
Child.
Let your
wings grow
and fly
so high
to the
heights of the skies.
Thursday, 14 June 2012
Presidents of the USA: a Comprehensive List
PRESIDENTS OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Twenty minutes ago, a very good friend of mine I fondly call Mtumwi
Dennis, asked me to give him a list of all the Presidents of the USA from the
great George Washington. I felt duty-bound to assist my very good friend and
here goes the list complete with the years during which these men held the highest
office of their land:
1.
George
Washington (1789 - 97)
2.
John
Adams (1797 - 1801)
3.
Thomas
Jefferson (1801 - 09)
4.
James
Madison (1809 - 17)
5.
James
Monroe (1817 -25)
6.
John
Quincy Adams (1825 - 29)
7.
Andrew
Jackson (1829 - 37)
8.
Martin
Van Buren (1837 - 41)
9.
William
Henry Harrison (1841)
10.
John
Tyler (1841 - 45)
11.
James
Knox Polk (1845 - 49)
12.
Zachary
Taylor (1849 - 50)
13.
Millard
Fillmore (1850 - 53)
14.
Franklin
Pierce (1853 - 57)
15.
James
Buchanan (1857 - 61)
16.
Abraham
Lincoln (1861 - 65)
17.
Andrew
Johnson (1865 - 69)
18.
Ulysses
Simpson Grant (1869 - 77)
19.
Rutherford
Birchard Hayes (1877 - 81)
20.
James
Abram Garfield (1881)
21.
Chester
Alan Arthur (1881 - 85)
22.
Grover
Cleveland (1885 - 89)
23.
Benjamin
Harrison (1889 - 93)
24.
Grover
Cleveland (1893 - 97)
25.
William
McKinley (1897 - 1901)
26.
Theodore
Roosevelt (1901 - 09)
27.
William
Howard Taft (1909 - 13)
28.
Woodrow
Wilson (1913 - 21)
29.
Warren
Gamaliel Harding (1921 - 23)
30.
Calvin
Coolidge (1923 - 29)
31.
Herbert
Clark Hoover (1929 - 33)
32.
Franklin
Delano Roosevelt (1933 - 45)
33.
Harry
S. Truman (1945 - 53)
34.
Dwight
David Eisenhower (1953 - 61)
35.
John
Fitzgerald Kennedy (1961 - 63)
36.
Lyndon
Baines Johnson (1963 - 69)
37.
Richard
Milhous Nixon (1969 - 74)
38.
Gerard Rudolph Ford (1974 - 77)
39.
Jimmy
Carter (1977 - 81)
40.
Ronald
Wilson Reagan (1981 - 89)
41.
George
Herbert Walker Bush (1989 - 93)
42.
William
Jefferson Blythe IV Clinton (1993 - 2001)
43.
George
Walker Bush (2001 - 09)
44.
Barrack
Hussein Obama (2009 - Present)
Munthu-Nerva Dzikanyanga 2012©
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