Education and the Rights of the Child
A great deal is talked about how to empower young people and give them a decent start in life and in the past three years or so, the Islamic movement in North Africa calling itself Boka Harum has set itself the primary goal of destroying the modern education system in areas where the Muslim faith is dominant. I think we all sat in front of our televisions when that young Muslim girl from Pakistan made that remarkable speech to the United Nations about the right to education for the child.
From my own perspective, if you want to give a child something that they will never leave behind, it is the right to a decent education. I grew up in a racially segregated society where people with my skin colour were given every opportunity in life and a world class education at virtually no cost to my family.
My mother was trying to raise 4 kids with a dysfunctional husband who had become an alcoholic. She herself only had two years of formal education and had taught herself to type and write shorthand. She got a job with an international company and was soon promoted to the position of PA to the Managing Director.
Even so things were very tough. Once a month we got a small selection of comics, I never had a jacket to wear until I went to College and my older brother bought a jacket for me. But I went to State owned and operated schools and in the process, although I did not appreciate it at the time, I received an education that was about as good as any in the world. Our teachers were quite well paid, professionals with degrees from good Universities and very dedicated. A Headmaster was an important personage in our society.
With a decent Matric after 11 years of school, I was accepted into an Agricultural College and then to University emerging in the end with a degree from London University that got me my first job as an economist. These doors would never have opened to me had I not had the benefit of a decent primary and secondary education.