The saga of the runaway lovers, 15-year-old Sussex schoolgirl Megan Stammers and her teacher Jeremy Forrest, 30, has not gone unnoticed at the Mahogany Ridge and there has been fevered discussion on their giddy adventure ever since the pair boarded a ferry for France ten days ago.
Quite why we should get excited by this is a mystery. This sort of thing, after all, is not entirely unfamiliar to us. In June, for example, this year, the KwaZulu-Natal education MEC Senzo Mchunu announced that almost 13 000 schoolgirls in the province fell pregnant in 2010 and 2011 and that, in most cases, the men to blame were their teachers.
That's a lot of extra-curricular activity, and we know the teachers petting is not confined to KZN. In fact, in January Mpumalanga education authorities laid charges of misconduct against a 38-year-old teacher who had, in the words of the Sowetan newspaper, "allegedly caused a 16-year-old not to write matric examinations last year".
Her parents had refused to lay criminal charges against the teacher who, it seemed, had slept with a number of pupils. As one of his colleagues put it, "Many people have been complaining about his love for minors but we feel that this time he has really crossed the line by preventing a child from writing exams."
But back to the runaways and their amour fou. Some months ago, Forrest, a married man, wrote about his "moral dilemma" in a blog, and revealed that it had left him questioning how to define what is right and what is wrong, but concluded, "At the end of the day, I was satisfied that if you can look in the mirror and know that, under all the front, that you are a good person, that should have faith in your judgement."
True, it is a clumsy sentence - Forrest teaches maths, not English - but we get the drift. As one of the Ridge regulars remarked, "Is it not endlessly fascinating how capable we are of persuading ourselves that certain moral norms do not apply to us? And still manage to keep a positive self-image as we act unethically?"