Zimbabwe Renewal - the Role of Education and Health
We talk a lot in Zimbabwe about empowerment - Zanu PF interprets that in terms of its own creed of indigenisation and a slogan from the war which means "power to the people". Like the slogan often repeated by the President that "Zimbabwe will never be a colony again" these slogans bear little relationship with our current realities. The truth is we have never been so disempowered and with our use of the US dollar we can hardly call ourselves totally and proudly independent. Aside from that, we owe everybody money and cannot pay anyone and any businessman knows full well what that means in terms of our "independence".
Empowering people involves many things and independence is an important issue - but not in the sense that Zanu PF uses the term. It's important to give people power by granting them the capacity to make a living and the right under law to own and control the assets they use to sustain their daily lives - especially their homes. The reality is that freehold title rights are one of the foundations of economic growth and real democracy. But if you are from a poor disadvantaged family there are two things that you must expect from your Government if you are to be empowered so as to be able to pull yourself out of poverty - that is access to education and health services.
If you are born poor, the one thing that can open the future for you is a decent education. I was born to a poor family - privileged because we were white in a society that automatically gave us special opportunities on the basis that we were white. I went to state funded schools which were at the time absolutely world class and was able to acquire a basic qualification from my high school which allowed me first to go to College and then to University. I was the first and only member of my immediate family to secure a university degree; I did so by working throughout the whole time I was at University.
A man I worked for at the start of my career said to me that a qualification would have little real value in the pursuit of my chosen career as I would have to unlearn much of what I had been taught and instead learn to understand the complex world I was going to work in where specific and specialized skills and knowledge would be required. My qualifications would open the door to that world, but that was all. But the start of the process begins when that young child walks out of the mud hut in which they were raised and goes to the nearby school to begin his or her education.
It is one of the most important of the UN Millennium Development Goals that the global community should commit itself to making it possible for every child in the world to get a decent education - at least at primary level. My own view is that we should be aiming higher and should try to guarantee every child at least 10 years of formal education. It's not enough to guarantee places in a classroom - such education must be of a high standard. Teachers and school heads are the key to that and these employees in all countries should be afforded the status of an elite who receive above average salaries and benefits.