African Education Rhodesia

2. OPENING OF THE BEIT HALL: GOROMONZI SCHOOL 1953

March 28th, 1953.                                                                                       John Hammond

This is a big day in the history of this School and we are grateful to all of you for coming here this afternoon to share it with us.

The generosity of the Beit Trust is well known in the Rhodesias and we at this School have received much from them.  During the past eight years, 180 pupils of this School have had their fees paid for them by the Beit Trust, while generous grants have also been made for the purchase of library books.   Today, we are here to express our thanks for this magnificent Hall and Library.   No School could ever hope for better.

This Hall, designed on such generous lines, is equipped for any stage or cinematograph show which we may wish to put on.   It will become the hub of the social life of the School and as it matures, it will record the School’s history and carry the names of those who have served it well.

The Library, where we shall shortly have tea, is a beautiful room, admirably suited for its purpose.   There the pupils will come to appreciate the value of intellectual exploration, beauty and peace.

These contributions to the education of the boys and girls of this School cannot be measured.   They become a part of each individual which will awaken in them new ideas of what is good and worthwhile.   We are grateful beyond our powers of expression, to the Beit Trsut who have given us this wonderful building and we can assure them that no effort will be spared to make this a worthy memorial of the Centenary of the birth of the Founder of the Trust.      We shall endeavour to ensure that the Memorial will be in better people as much as in bricks and mortar.

It is difficult on an occasion such as this, to give you a very comprehensive picture of what we are attempting to do at this School.   Much will have to be left to your imagination.   Samples of the girls’ needlework and of the boys’ art is set out for you to see.   You will also have the opportunity of testing the girls’ cooking when we adjourn for tea while after tea a short play will be put on for your entertainment.   For the rest, we shall be pleased if those who are interested will attach themselves to one of the pupils who have been detailed to help you look round the buildings.   

In doing so, you will be able to picture for yourselves the normal everyday life which goes on here.   It does not differ much from the life to be found in any secondary school.   The pupils do nearly all their own domestic chores, cleaning the hostels, and tidying and developing the grounds and playing fields themselves.   In the classrooms the scenes are much the same as in any school, except perhaps that the Staff have to spend less energy in persuading the pupils to work hard!   In the dining hall and hostels there is the normal amount of clatter and chatter found in any school.

We cover the full range of secondary work up to the standard of the Cambridge School Certificate and some pupils, who aim to go on for study at Universities, return for a further year of post-certificate work.   Results in these public examinations, have on the whole, been most impressive.   In the first three years that pupils from this School took the Cambridge School Certificate, only three out of 83 were unsuccessful.

It is too early yet for us to judge with certainty how the former pupils of this School will react when faced with the greater freedom and the larger responsibilities of the outside world.   We have the evidence that, in so far as examinations can test it, these pupils have the capacity to do well.   We wait now for those reports which trickle in from time to time, telling of success and failure in the world for which we are attempting to train them.   Should any of you come in contact with those who have been trained here, I hope you will spare a moment to tell us how you find them.   Please do not attempt to spare our feelings, we are keen to know of our failures as well as our successes.   

We want to know if they have the right attitude to their work, if they are well mannered and if they accept responsibility.  We want to know, in fact, whether our attempts to train their characters are producing results.   Examinations are very satisfactory things for schoolmasters.   They assess, objectively, the success or otherwise of one’s work.   They do this so successfully that there is sometimes a danger that we may come to the point where we feel that the work of the classroom is all that matters.   I am asking that as many of you as can do so, shall act, as the opportunities occur, as examiners of our efforts to make these boys and girls into useful citizens.

It is imperative that we should succeed in this task because we are now training those who will be foundation members of a new class in African Society, a class who will have to assume responsibility, not only in their own professions, but in the social growth of the African people of this part of the world.   On them will rest the responsibility for maintaining and building up standards of morality and integrity and behaviour which will act as a pattern for others.   They are pioneers, and we are most anxious that they should start out along the right track.   We solicit your co-operation in our attempts to achieve this.

When we look outside the confines of our daily jobs, where we are concerned primarily with the development of individual boys and girls … and when we try to assess the educational task before us in this continent, we have cause to wonder whether our efforts can every produce results quickly enough.   The speed at which results can be achieved in this 20thCentury has increased enormously in almost everything except schooling.   The Medical profession has devised rapid, easy and relatively inexpensive ways of controlling most epidemic diseases.   The politicians have, at their service, all the modern means of telecommunication for the dissemination of ideas.   Industry and Agriculture and Commerce, all have mechanical aids to speed along production and turnover, provided the labour to work their various devices is available.   

But schooling cannot be hastened.   We still need to take a sixth of mans’ allotted span to bring him to the stage where he can begin to be fully educated and no machine, and no vaccine can contribute very much towards hastening the process.

In Africa the problem is made even more acute by reason of the enormous backlog which has to be made up.   Added to this, we lack, in the main, the educated parents, who, in most other countries can lay a foundation on which the schools can more easily build.   On the other side of school life there have been, ever since this continent was settled by Europeans, more jobs than people to fill them and this has led to a lighter discipline and a more indulgent attitude from employers than has been the case elsewhere.

The schools, therefore are forced to carry not only their own responsibilities for the dissipation of ignorance and the inculcation of habits of discipline, but they have also, in part at least, had to take on some of the responsibilities normally assumed by parents.   At the same time they must try to turn out people whose standards of discipline and behaviour will persist into their lives after school because, in this country the thought of losing a job does not yet have the same disciplinary effect as it does in most other parts of the world.

This is our problem as I, a Schoolmaster, see it.   I am amazed that, taken by and large, our success in tackling it has been as great as it has, and that our failures have not been very much more obvious.   We must, however, ask ourselves if the traditional methods of school education will ever, by themselves, be able to outstrip ignorance, before it, ravishing our soils, and wasting our resources, leads us inevitably to shortage of foods and goods and all the calamities which would follow in the wake of such shortages.

The “white man’s burden” hitherto has been an administrative burden, today it is an educational one and is no longer the “white man’s burden” – it is the ‘educated man’s burden”.   If we are to overcome ignorance within the space of time allowed us, we cannot expect success if the schools system alone has to bear the main burden.   Even assuming that all necessary finance were to be provided, the shortage of men and women qualified to teach in schools, would still limit the rate of progress to a dangerous slowness.

I can see but one answer and that lies in the rapid increase of well educated people, who, in their everyday lives, may assume some part of the responsibility.   We cannot do it on our own.   Therefore, every housewife who insists upon habits of cleanliness in her kitchen, and on hard work in her garden … every farmer who demands a straight furrow in place of a wandering one … every industrialist who insists on punctuality and high production, and every business man who insists on accuracy of work and honesty in dealing with other people is contributing his or her portion to the solution of this problem.   And if this problem is to be solved we must have more people more conscious of the immense task which lies before us all.

To Africa’s educated minority I appeal for a more conscious effort to assist in dissipating ignorance;  to Africa’s uneducated and semi-educated youth I would suggest that learning can be obtained elsewhere than in schools if you are but prepared to be taught;  from Africa’s parents, I request a firmer discipline of the children and insistence on good behaviour in the home and a search for other avenues for the instruction of your children if you cannot provide it yourselves and if the schools cannot take them.

You will, I hope, forgive me for having thrust these rather pedagogic ideas upon you.   I know that your interest in our efforts here is considerable and I have therefore taken the liberty of trying to put before you my idea of what our aims must be.

Ladies and Gentlemen may I repeat our thanks for your attendance here this afternoon and once again express our very great thanks to the Beit Trustees and particularly Colonel Ponsonby for handing over this Hall and Library for our use.

I now have pleasure in inviting you to take tea in the Library, and to see our first production on this stage immediately afterwards

1. TJOLOTJO SCHOOL SPORTS DAY : June 6th, 1938

John Hammond

 It is customary on this day for a report on the year’s work to be given.   Before doing that, however, I want to thank you all for coming out here today.   

 That the journey is not a pleasure trip we all know, none better than those of us who live here.   We have made an attempt this year to add a little comic relief to the monotony of the bumps.   Our principal misgiving when editing the road map was that on first reading it through at Nyamandhlovu you would all turn round and go home again!    I hope that what you have seen today has made you feel that the journey has been worth while.

By this time next year, I hope that the road map will be out of date.   Next year a new and magnificent bridge is to be put across the Gwaai on another road.   We owe this new bridge to the generosity of the Government, the Native Reserves Fund and the Beit Trustees.   When this is completed the journey to Bulawayo will be less arduous than the one you have taken today;  but even a new Bridge cannot make an indifferent road perfect and there will still remain 15 miles of road on the new route which will be capable of doing damage to the springs of any car.   But I sincerely hope that you will not let a mere 15 miles of bad road deter you from visiting us again.

 Today, of course, the School is on show.   Naturally things are looking a bit more spick and span than they usually do, but we have tried to give you some indication of what the School looks like on an ordinary working day.   Naturally the boys work with greater enthusiasm when they have an audience to watch them;  but you will have been able to get some idea of what we do here and how we do it.   If any of you feel that you want to see more, I take this opportunity of extending to you an invitation to come out here when the School is in normal working order and to spend a day or two finding out more about the place.

 This year, it was decided to limit the numbers of the School to 200.   This was made necessary for two main reasons – water and accommodation.   We have had anxious moments this year with our water supplies;  in October last the second borehole gave signs of going in, one having done so the year before.   Then in March this year, the third suddenly dropped just when it should have been at its best.   A machine was rushed in to sink a new hole and has found an apparently excellent supply.   This new borehole is not yet in use – the other two having picked up sufficiently to keep us going and our water problems are temporarily solved;  I say ‘temporarily’ because I would not dare to guarantee the life of any borehole in this area – only a very rash man would.   When once an engine is put to pump on a hole it seldom seems to last more than three or four years and in spite of the thousand gallons an hour which our new hole gave on a test, I am still far from optimistic about the future.

The new dormitory, which was completed in January, has made it possible to house all the boys in good buildings.   It would not have been possible to exceed our present numbers without having to go on using the old and very dilapidated buildings which have served as dormitories almost since the School started 18 years ago.

For the coming year, no funds have been given for the construction of permanent buildings … the dining hall in which you have just heard the boys singing, had to be left uncompleted through lack of funds.   I regret that I am unable to say when work is likely to be resumed.

A few figures regarding the boys of the School may be of interest.   They come from 26 different districts of Southern Rhodesia and from three neighbouring territories.   There are 14 vernacular languages spoken in the School and 12 different religious denominations are represented;  two boys claim no definite denomination;  86% of the boys are between the ages of 15 and 25, the average age being about 20.   23 of the 37 new boys who entered the School this year came from 15 different central or boarding Schools – the other 14 came from Kraal (village) schools.

Many of them travel long distances to come to school.   Most of them come from Matobe, Gwanda, Mzingwane and this reserve, but some come from as far as Marandellas and Chipinga.   One man arrived this year from Enkeldoorn.   He was 36 and wanted to enter Standard 2.   We hadn’t the heart to turn him away, so he is here now struggling along, and hoping that his time here will help to improve his wage earning capacity and so make it possible for him to send his children to school.

The numbers following the different industries in the upper standards show the popularity of each … 20 take building, 17 carpentry, 7 farming and 15 tanning and leatherwork.

This year, standards V and VI are allowed to specialise.   Next year Standard VI and a post standard VI class will specialise and in the year after than specialising will only be allowed after boys have passed standard VI.   The lower standards do general industrial work which includes elementary building, carpentry, agriculture and leatherwork.   A course of metalwork will be started this year for standard VI and I hope that in a year or two we shall be able to offer that as a further course in which boys may specialise. 

The time table is divided so that half the boys are on industrial work while the others are in the classroom.We try as far as is possible, to relate the work of both sections.We are in fact, giving the boys a grown up form of what is being called modern education.Most of the boys have to earn their livings as soon as they have finished their schooling here.Their time at school is too short to allow them to learn by playing in the lower standards.That time will come, but meanwhile I sincerely hope that we shall not be asked to modernise to the extent of having free discipline.

Those of you who were here last year will have seen the progress that has been made since then.     The new dormitory was built almost entirely by school boys and completed in eight months.   The pupils get a certain amount of useful practice on these permanent buildings but most of their instruction is given on the teachers’ cottages.   Those cottages are of the type which we hope Natives will build in their Reserves.   They are designed to show the Native that in the Reserves he has the material from which to build a good house.   No large cash outlay has to be made to purchase other materials such as glass, ant course etc.

The poles and grass are getting scarce in some areas;  however, our boys agricultural training should equip him to grow these things or at least to ensure that supplies are maintained in those areas where they do still exist.   Personally I am in doubt as to whether this is a right principal to follow.   Should we endeavour to make the Native self sufficient in his own Reserve, or should we encourage him to train for his wants.   The greatest benefit to the country as a whole would undoubtedly come from this latter training.   

To make this trade possible however, he must have the where-with-al to buy his goods.   Only two ways lie open to him to make money;  firstly by selling his labour and secondly by selling produce and stock.   In both of these his scope is limited by the very people who want his trade.   And so the vicious circle continues and we, who are endeavouring to raise the standard of the Native population, see our own way out in making the Native self sufficient, while at the same time we see the drawbacks of that practice.

At this end of the country, it is through stock that the Native will benefit most.   If agriculture can be raised even to the level where famines need no longer occur, a great advance will have been made.   We averaged seven bags of maize to the acre on the School plots this year.   Only fifteen inches of rain fell on those crops before they were reaped.   That shows that even in this area, famines need not occur if sound methods of agriculture are followed.   Even if only a few Natives, having learnt, then carry out the methods by which they get fair crops in bad areas, our time will not have been wasted.   

But for anything over and above the bare necessities, the Native here must look to their stock and it is on animal husbandry that we wish to lay most emphasis.   We are slowly improving the plant which we have for the teaching of this.   New pigsties have been built this year and a new stone kraal.   Both of these add considerably to the appearance of the cattle sheds.   This year we hope to put up new milking sheds and sheep pens.   Without them the instruction we give loses much of its value.   Mere theory is insufficient;  concrete results push home lessons much more quickly.   I hope that when the time comes for us to ask for the necessary funds for this work that we shall be able to obtain the backing of the Hon. Minister of Agriculture, who is here today.

The tannery continues to do very good work.   A Native Teacher is in entire charge of that section of the work.   The results he obtains are splendid.   Educationally it is an excellent industrial subject, particularly for boys who ar too small to hand bricks or planes.   Its value economically in a cattle country is too obvious for me to have to mention it.

The exhibit of carpentry is not a very large one.   There has been a great deal of building construction to be done this year and carpenters have consequently not had a great deal of time in the workshop.   But you will have been able to see the type of thing we teach them to make and you will have had a chance to study the quality of their work.

Of the future, two things will always have to be contended;  water and malaria.   This year an average of six boys were absent each day during April on account of malaria.   Last year for the same period, the number was twelve.   This may have been due to the short rains.   We like to think that the improvement has been mainly brought about by the methods of control of mosquitoes which we have introduced as well as to the extra clearing and drainage.   Of one thing I am certain, this improved situation would not have been but for the presence here of Miss Weir.   She has probably the hardest job on the place, yet never have I known it to be too much trouble to turn out at any time of the day or night to give assistance to those who need it.   We are extremely fortunate as a district, to have her at Tjolotjo.

We might be able to reduce the incidence of malaria, but increasing our water supply is a different matter.   No one, as I have said before, should dare to guarantee the continued supply of water in an area such as this.   There are very few possibilities of damming;  and overstocking in the neighbouring Reserve leaves the veld bare of all grass.   As a result most of the rain which falls runs off instead of sinking into the ground.   Before we can hope for adequate water supplies, the problem of overstocking and soil erosion will have to be overcome.   On the continuance of this adequate water supply rests the fate of this School.   It is my belief that a definite decision will have to be made within five years.

Before I stop I must take this opportunity of expressing my gratitude to the members of the staff for their loyal co-operation.   In a School such as this where there are several branches of technical work, it is impossible to carry on if the is any lack of co-operation among the staff.   For the past year, there has certainly been no such lack, and it is principally to this that I attribute the excellent progress which the School has made.   I must also extend the thanks of us all to the ladies who have given so much of their time and trouble in the preparation of this lunch.   At this distance from town, catering is not easy, especially when one has to deal with the unreliability of certain Bulawayo firms.

Lastly, I would like to emphases once again the pleasure which it has given us to entertain you here today and to express the hope that we shall have further opportunities to show you a small part of what is being done towards the raising of the standard of a vast number of Natives in this country.