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Petina
Gappah revisits her childhood schools
Petina
Gappah, Guernica
January 17, 2012
http://allafrica.com/stories/201205071285.html
If Zimbabwe
were human, the country would need more years of therapy than its
30 years of independence. According to Foreign Policy, in 2010,
Zimbabwe was fourth on the "Failed State Index." In 2006,
it was declared to be the unhappiest place on earth-ahead of Zimbabwe
on the "Happiness Index" were countries like the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Sudan, and North Korea. In 2008, it had inflation
rates not seen since the Weimar Republic: prices of goods changed
as customers walked to the tills. By any measure, Zimbabweans should
just have given up, switched off what little lights remained burning,
and hightailed it to the nearest border.
Zimbabwe's collapse
is jarring because it has been so fast.
Particularly,
in education, where it once led all of Africa, Zimbabwe has had
a dizzying fall. The papers are full of stories of teachers at government
schools threatening to strike, of pupils being sent home for not
paying school fees, of overcrowded classrooms and poorly maintained
schools.
At the beginning
of last year, I planned to write about the state of education in
coalition Zimbabwe. In September 2008, Zimbabwe woke to a new chapter
in its history. For the first time since independence, Zanu PF,
the party of the rooster emblem, was no longer cock of the walk.
Mugabe's party entered into a power-sharing arrangement with the
MDC, the opposition party that has sworn to reverse the economic
decline. Ministerial portfolios were divvied up between the three
parties to the coalition.
The Ministry
of Education, or, to give it its full name, The Ministry of Education,
Sport, Art, and Culture, went to the smaller of the two MDC parties,
and is headed by David Coltart, a lawyer and senator from Bulawayo.
Senator Coltart is known as one of the most accessible of the ministers.
His door was open when I walked in to tell him about my project,
and to ask for his permission to visit government schools.
My initial plan
had been to go to all of Zimbabwe's ten provinces, and visit two
primary schools and two secondary schools in each province. I soon
came to realize that bureaucracy had not quite caught up with the
reality of the new coalition government. The head of the first government
school I visited would not see me because I did not have the authority
of the provincial head.
"But the
Minister signed my letter," I protested and produced the letter
signed by Senator Coltart.
Not good enough,
clearly.
"That letter
was not signed by the provincial director," I was told.
I went to Chester
House in Harare to see the Provincial Director, a small man in an
over-furnished office who put a stamp on it, signed it, and wrote,
"APPROVED" above his signature, effectively approving
his boss's approval. After that, I had to see the District Officer,
a smiling woman with a complicated hairstyle who put down her tea
and biscuits to stamp the minister's letter, appending her own approval
to the other two approvals. A friend who works closely with the
Ministry of Education shrugs when I tell him this anecdote. He explains
that the Senator's Permanent Secretary - said to be a staunch Zanu
PF supporter - is apparently involved in a war of attrition with
his MDC minister, almost, my source says, as though he does not
want the minister to succeed.
I decide to
limit my visits to the schools to which I have a personal connection:
a writer visiting her old schools to write about them, I reason,
is an entirely different thing to an unknown person walking into
strange schools, even with ministerial approval.
Besides, I am
lucky to have gone to five schools in Zimbabwe, six if I include
the University
of Zimbabwe.
"Why so
many?" my photographer, Rudo
Nyangulu asks.
I explain to
her that I am of the generation that started school in Rhodesia,
continued in Zimbabwe-Rhodesia and finished in Zimbabwe. Those were
the days of social mobility, of dismantled racial barriers. I did
the first year of my primary education at Chembira Government Primary
School, did Grade 2 at Kundai Government Primary School, and then
did Grades 4 to 7 at Alfred Beit Primary School before completing
my secondary education at St. Dominic's Secondary School and St.
Ignatius' College. It is to these old schools that Rudo and I turn
in the company of our driver, Innocent.
My first school
was Chembira School, the first government primary school to be built
in Glen Norah, a black township established in the early 1970s.
There were more children than there were school places, which meant
that about 80 pupils shared a classroom, with a group of children
coming to school in the mornings and another in the afternoons.
Until the classroom cleared, my classmates and I sat under a tree
with our teacher. "Hot seating" only ended when a new
school opened the following year.
What Zimbabwe
did particularly well in the first twenty years of its life was
to correct the racial injustice that had denied quality universal
education to the majority of the country's black children.
Behind the administration
block is the tap from where we drank water in our cupped hands.
"A DAY IN SCHOOL IS A GAIN ON ETERNITY" says a notice
on the board inside the reception. Below this is a large poster
outlining the school's plans for the next five years, the most ambitious
being to build a new block of classrooms. When I tell the deputy
headmistress that I am an old pupil, she welcomes me with a hug
of delight, especially when I mention where I have been since 1978.
This being Zimbabwe, it turns out that she knows one of my aunts
- they did their teacher training together in the 70s.
Hot seating
is back again as there are simply too many children for the available
classrooms - 1,315 in all. Glen Norah is in the catchment area of
the Hopley Farm informal settlement, she explains, which means that
they have many children from very poor families. The BEAM programme
is important for them, the deputy head says, and shows me a group
of parents assisting in sorting through applications in the staff
room.
By the BEAM
programme, she means the "Basic Education Assistance Module,"
a donor-funded scheme that aims to ensure that children from poor
families stay in school: it is aimed at what its multilateral donors
call OVCs-orphans and other vulnerable children. They have their
fees and levies paid for them and are supplied with uniforms and
stationery.
"But what
about children not covered under the BEAM? Would you expel children
whose parents cannot pay fees?' I ask.
There have been
several stand-offs between schools and the Ministry, with the latter
insisting that schools cannot expel children for not paying fees,
while schools point out that without fees, they are unable to run.
In addition to the government-set school fees of about 20 dollars
for a term of three months, there is the "development levy,"
which varies from small amounts at the poorer schools to hundreds,
and even thousands, of dollars at the better-off schools.
The levy is
charged directly by each School Development Association-the SDAs
are made up of parents and teachers. Faced with a perpetually broke
government, the SDAs have been the drivers of school development.
In fact, the plan to build a new classroom block at Chembira is
an SDA project.
"We do
not expel children," the deputy headmistress says. "You
find that many such children have just one parent, and so, even
if they are not orphans exactly, they will be covered somehow."
She tells me
that the SDA levies at Chembira have enabled them to pay for two
extra teachers, and for their Traditional Dance coach. The school
has won the country's leading Traditional Dance competition for
school children. Last year, Chembira came top in the whole country,
she tells me proudly.
"We are
doing really well. We have an excellent coach,' she beams, "Someone
who really believes in his job."
Does the same
commitment extend to the classroom, I ask. Are their teachers as
committed to excellence as the dance coach?
"There
are challenges,' she admits. "There are simply not enough teachers
for all the children."
As we walk around
the school, I meet the two oldest teachers; they must have been
there when I was, I prod them eagerly for memories of my old teacher,
but 1978 is too far in the past. Our tour of the school coincides
with break-time. The children, eager for any diversion, follow us
around. Rudo's camera is like a magnet; they jostle to have their
pictures taken.
As the deputy
headmistress tries to keep the children at a distance, I ask her
about the pressures facing the schools. She tells me what I will
hear at the two other primary schools I will visit: that the Grade
Zero classes are adding pressure to already pressured schools.
In 2005, the
government introduced an Early Development class, ECD, informally
called Grade Zero. It was intended to address the reality that not
all parents could afford to send their children to crèches,
which were all privately run and tended to be expensive.
The idea was
that all children should, before the formal start of primary school,
be equipped with the social skills they need to start school.
A wonderful
initiative in theory, but, as with many things in Zimbabwe, the
devil was in the implementation. The government did not build more
classrooms to accommodate Grade Zero children, who need toys, picture
books and specialized learning aids. In the first few years, there
were no teachers who were properly qualified in early childhood
development. Many government schools were already struggling with
too many children, falling infrastructure and indifferent and unmotivated
teachers, if they were not absent. Grade Zero has thus added more
children to schools without accompanying improvements in infrastructure.
"We really
want to educate poor children but we can't educate anyone without
money, no?" says Sister Elizabeth.
I remark to
the deputy head that Chembira has the same number of toilets it
had 30 years ago.
"That's
when they are working," she says, ominously.
We visit the
Grade Zero classroom. It is the room that was once the library,
and still has LIBRARY written on the door. Efforts have gone into
making it cheerful. The floor has been carefully swept. Children
learn to distinguish shapes from old boxes of different sizes. The
walls are decorated with collages made of pictures from newspapers
and magazines. It is woefully inadequate, and, at the same time,
heroic in a way that is heartbreaking.
"When the
new classroom block is built," the headmistress says, "then
this can be a library again.
"But we
have no books," she adds as an afterthought. "You see
why we need help?"
To understand
what has gone wrong at schools like Chembira requires an understanding
of what it used to do well. What Zimbabwe did particularly well
in the first twenty years of its life was to correct the racial
injustice that had denied quality universal education to the majority
of the country's black children: throughout the history of the colony,
state education was bottlenecked to ensure that fewer and fewer
blacks had access to education as they progressed up to tertiary
education.
Government schools
for whites, and to a lesser extent, those for Coloreds and Indians,
had the best resources, while the "Africans only" schools,
the Group B schools like Chembira, suffered from overcrowding, inadequately
trained teachers and no resources. It is no wonder that at independence,
the government, and its first leader, Mugabe, a teacher, considered
it the chief priority, even ahead of land reform, to respond to
the thirst for education. But in the last ten short years of Zimbabwe's
political and economic crisis, these hard won gains have been all
but lost.
Chishawasha
is a short drive from central Harare. It would be shorter still
if the dust road from the turn off at Enterprise Road were tarred.
We crawl along
the dust road. The surrounding Shawasha Hills have become a fashionable
new development, dotted with new houses built with new money. The
valley itself remains resolutely rural: Innocent stops the car to
let two small boys herd their cows along the road.
Chishawasha
is Catholic Central, with four schools, a clinic, the regional seminary
and a cathedral all built on land that Rhodesia's founder, Cecil
John Rhodes, gave to the Jesuits in 1890s. It is prime land. The
school overlooks the old Valley of the Millionaires-after the Federation
of the two Rhodesias and Nyasaland collapsed, its last Governor-
General, Simon Ramsay, Lord Dalhousie, set up a farm here.
We drive to
St Dominic's Secondary school. Everything seems to be exactly the
same. The redbrick classrooms. The convent with its Dominican sisters.
The school hall were mass was held and where we sat exams. The statue
of the Virgin in the grotto. There is Sister Elizabeth, with her
gentle face and German accent, and there, Mr. Madubeko, the headmaster
and my old science teacher. A highly selective girls' school, St
Dominic's was every parent's dream. It offered a first class education
in an austere but nurturing Catholic environment, far from the temptations
of town. Daughters of the wealthy mixed with girls from poor rural
families, their common bond academic excellence.
"Is the
school still committed to educating girls from all backgrounds?"
I ask my former teachers.
"We really
want to educate poor children but we can't educate anyone without
money, no?" says Sister Elizabeth.
Mr. Madubeko
confirms this but clarifies that even though only those able to
pay fees come to the school, they aim to keep the fees low. The
fees are currently less than 400 dollars a term. Sister Elizabeth
explains that in years when they got donations from overseas, they
could pay for girls who may have lost their parents and were unable
to continue.
The more I look,
the more I see changes. The library has moved to a room twice its
former size. There is a new A-Level block, built in 2001, which
offers accommodation for 40 girls. St Dominic's has received an
impressive number of Secretary's Bells; at a hundred percent, the
school consistently has the highest pass rate for A-Levels in the
country.
"We do
not take girls with less than 5 As at O-Level if they were here,"
Sister Elizabeth says. "And if they come from outside the school,
they have to have 8 As." Mr. Madubeko bemoans the current pass-rate
of 90 per cent at O-Level, the lowest it has been in ten years.
"When I was at St Dominic's," I remark, feeling smug,
"The pass-rate was 100 percent."
Mr. Madubeko
sighs and says that they are often under pressure to take girls
who are not up to standard. One of the girls tells me later that
one of Zimbabwe's top army generals had a daughter here. An army
truck drove up every Saturday to bring her food, even though this
was against the school rules. Mr. Madubeko is circumspect about
the kind of pressures he is under, saying only that these pressures
prevent a perfect pass rate.
The same faces
I crept past those many years ago, trying very hard not to attract
any attention, are still here, among them Sister Elizabeth, Sister
Veronica, the deputy headmaster and his wife, who teaches science,
Mai Farai, the Librarian, and Mr. Madubeko himself who has been
here since 1975.
For the Dominican
nuns, it is clear: the convent, and so the school, is their home.
"But the others, why do the other teachers stay so long?"
I ask.
Mr. Mutangara,
deputy head since 1987, laughs and says, "There is nowhere
else to go."
Mr. Madubeko
explains it has been a stable home and a wonderful environment for
his children who all grew up in the valley. It also helps, he says,
that the staff receives a better salary than the ministry salary-it
is topped up by money from fees. He becomes wistful as he wonders
whether his staying so long has been good or bad for the school.
We move around
the school taking photographs and find girls hard at work. A class
in social geography is exploring the concept of equality under socialism.
In the food and nutrition class, the girls are learning to make
a curry. In this same room, my classmates and I were taught to make
food meant for cold English winters, shepherd's pie and toad-in-the-hole,
Yorkshire pudding and apple crumble. At the end of the corridor
is a literature room. There are five girls there now, with books
before them, discussing Measure for Measure.
As we leave,
I take a look at the school's vision statement on the notice board.
One of the aims of the school, according to this, is "preparation
for life in all its dimensions, its profound meaning and transformation
beyond death to eternal life." There is no way of measuring
whether the school achieves this. What it achieves without question
are stellar results: twenty-three years after I left, St Dominic's
is clearly still one of the top schools in the country.
From St Dominic's,
I went to St Ignatius College as one of the 40 girls at Zimbabwe's
finest Jesuit school for boys. Our mission was partly to help the
boys move with ease between the all-boys environment of Form 1 to
4 to the co-educational A-Levels. With us, they got used to girls
before being unleashed on an unsuspecting world. But we were there
mainly because Mary Ward, a forward-thinking English nun who founded
the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary, now called the Congregation
of Jesus, dreamed of setting up girls' schools on the Jesuit model.
The Mary Ward girls, as we were called, shared classes with the
boys.
We received
a first class education.
Since its establishment
on 1962, St Ignatius has educated generations of brilliant boys
from poor and modest backgrounds: better-off families in search
of a Jesuit education tend to send their sons to St. Ignatius' posher
brother school in town, St. George's College.
When I visit
St Ignatius with Rudo and Innocent, it is like stepping into the
achingly familiar. I was very happy here. The school is built on
a hill, with the Chishawasha valley on one side and a view of the
Valley of the Millionaires from Mary Ward House. Rich red earth
is everywhere, at one with the red bricks of the well-maintained
buildings.
Father Roland
von Nidda, the rector, is expansive in his welcome. He takes us
from classroom to classroom. My visit inspires him to invite me
to the Prize-Giving Day as a guest of honor.
Zimbabwe's Prime
Minister, Morgan Tsvangirai, likes to say that the real scope of
the tragedy of Mugabe's most recent years in power is that he has
destroyed not only what he inherited at independence, but also what
he built himself.
It is here that
I see my old school at its very best.
I speak to the
boys and girls about what the school meant to me, about the Jesuits
priests and Mary Ward sisters who taught me, about the fierce ambition
they burned in me to not only do exceptionally well but also, in
the words of St Ignatius of Loyola, to find a way to set the world
on fire.
I tell them
about my little rebellions, abandoning Catholicism for Buddhism,
only to find myself as lonely as my headmaster Father Berridge had
predicted: I would probably be the only Buddhist in Zimbabwe, he
had said.
"I also
want to be a Buddhist," whispers a small Form 2 boy to me later,
as I give out his prize.
Father Von Nidda
emphasizes in his speech that the school aims for a holistic education.
Over tea, he
tells me that he wants to send into the world compassionate young
men and women with critical minds. "And they are so bright,"
he says. "My goodness they are bright. I do worry though that
some of them take religion too seriously."
The prizes follow.
The sun hits my eyes as I give out certificate after certificate,
for best A-Level results, for the top ten in each class.
There are school
colors in volleyball, swimming, netball, rugby, soccer, basketball
and chess. It is inspiring to see both the fierce competition and
the pleasure in the pursuit of excellence.
There is humor
and camaraderie in the competitiveness. Peels of ululation ring
out as exultant parents dance little jigs to celebrate their children.
The teachers are just as competitive. They receive prizes for every
record they break.
As I hand out
their certificates and congratulate the A-level students who did
exceptionally well in both the Cambridge and Zimbabwe school examinations,
I ask where they are headed, and what they will read.
"I will
do medicine in South Africa," says one.
"I am off
to York University in Canada," says another.
They want to
study medicine and accountancy, law and engineering, architecture
and actuarial science.
"If I can't
go anywhere else," the former head girl, Nancy Kachingwe, tells
me, "Then it will have to be the University of Zimbabwe.'
Zimbabwe's Prime
Minister, Morgan Tsvangirai, likes to say that the real scope of
the tragedy of Mugabe's most recent years in power is that he has
destroyed not only what he inherited at independence, but also what
he built himself.
My journey around
my childhood confirms that, far from being an enabler and builder,
the government has actually been an inhibitor and destroyer. The
successful schools are those where government interference is felt
the least, private schools that, untainted by government control,
have managed to thrive.
Even in the
government schools, though, all is not quite lost.
Individuals
have managed to make a difference, even against the odds; ordinary
people like the headmaster and teachers at Kundai; the engaged parents
in the SDA at Chembira. Even Alfred Beit, which fell the furthest
of my previous schools, has barely hung on because parents have
agreed to pay more fees than government demands.
It is hard to
shake the sense I got that money has replaced race in Zimbabwe.
In Rhodesia, race determined whether a child was guaranteed a good
education. In post-crisis Zimbabwe, it is now class that is the
determinant. It is the ability of the parents to pay that determines
whether their children get a good education.
A Zimbabwean
PhD student has written a thesis that argues that this generation
of children will be less literate than their parents, a terrifying
possibility that brings with it the specter of social upheavals
to come.
In one respect,
the Zimbabwe of my education is the same Zimbabwe today.
It is a country
filled with children who manage to find happiness in difficult circumstances,
who make toys out of bricks, who study in the light of candles,
and who are filled with imaginations and ambitions that are bigger
than the collapse of their failed state.
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