Celebration of Human Rights Day without protection of language rights at US and elsewhere window dressing
21 March 2021
With language rights increasingly being violated in South Africa, the celebration of Human Rights Day, according to AfriForum, amounts to mere window dressing. The decision of the Senate of the University of Stellenbosch (US) that new courses will be offered in English only in the first semester of 2021 is a telling example of this disregard for language rights.
According to Alana Bailey, AfriForum’s Head of Cultural Affairs, the university’s blatant denial of Afrikaans students’ language rights is typical of many institutions in the country that pursue a pro-English agenda at the expense of ten of the country’s official languages.
“Despite overwhelming national and international evidence of the academic, psychological and economic benefits of mother-language education, English education is being presented to students as a shortcut to success, with institutions such as the US paying lip service to multilingualism,” says Bailey.
“The tragedy is that when marketing takes place, universities will make an effort to advertise in Afrikaans (for example), thereby creating the illusion that teaching will not be available in English only. In practice, however, lecturers and students experience the opposite and often feel too intimidated to complain about the language rights violations they encounter. They also believe that their complaints will fall on deaf ears. Recent allegations by students that they are not allowed to speak Afrikaans in US residences, and the university authorities’ denial in response to the complaints, reinforce such fears.”