Students protest in Stellenbosch over language

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Stellenbosch University rector and vice chancellor Professor Wim de Villiers has slammed a protest, which broke out in a lecture hall at the university on Monday morning.

A student sent News24 a video of the disruption, saying the objections emanated from the university’s language policy and was led by members of the Open Stellenbosch movement.

“Since my inauguration in April I have confirmed the right of students to protest on more than one occasion, but provided that they comply with the processes and procedures applicable to all university entities,” said De Villiers.

“Students do not, however, have the right to disrupt any academic activities, infringe on the rights of other students to study or disrupt administrative processes.”

The university earlier this month announced it would focus on the “consistent and possible accelerated implementation” of its approved Language Policy and Language Plan.

This “evolutionary process” would include monitoring and corrective measures, and give appropriate attention to the needs of students who maintain that language implementation processes adversely affect their academic performance.

In the video, students are seen leaving a third year political science lecture hall at the university's Arts and Social Sciences Building shortly after 09:00 on Monday morning. A handful started chanting.

De Villiers confirmed a sit-in also took place in one of the university’s administrative buildings.

An Office for Transformation is in the process of being established, and a Transformation Committee has been constituted.

On their Facebook page, hours after the protest, Open Stellenbosch called for an end to the t-option - where lessons are given in both English and Afrikaans.

“University management has ignored our calls for the transformation of the language policy, which should cater for the needs of all students at this institution. How are we supposed to get the degrees we are paying for if we don't understand what is being taught?”

De Villiers said the students had no need to resort to mass action.

“Our management team is eager to engage with the student community at round-table discussions.

“I have extended numerous invitations to our students. At the beginning of this semester, various student groups received invitations to such a round-table discussion in August, and we envisage this as the beginning of a regular discussion forum.”

News24 - http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Students-protest-in-Stellenbosch-over-language-20150727
 
[video=youtube;SptEXkVpKWg]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SptEXkVpKWg&feature=youtu.be[/video]
 
What a nettlesome problem. On the one hand I understand the dismay of Afrikaners. Maties is their premier academic institution in the Cape. It is older than the Republic and of course antedates apartheid. The Afrikaans community is rightly proud of the university as a cultural transmitter and as a professional and technical alma mater for their scions.

On the other hand, a goodly portion of the university's costs are paid from the public purse, and in the modern absolutising democratic state Caesar reduces public interest to a crude majoritariansm. It's deeply dismaying when our cultural minorities are marginalised in their own intuitions. It's as if their very identity is being dismantled.

The Afrikaners have graciously surrendered political power. Must they now also see their cultural institutions taken away by 'transformation'?

A wise ruler knows this is the kind of thing that engenders bitterness. But this is neither the place nor the time of wise rulers. It is the time of the Zumas and Malemas. We live in the age of the Pygmy Caesars.
 
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The irony is lost on these idiots, when Afrikaners were forced to study in English over a century ago and humiliated by wearing signs that said "I cannot read dutch", they did not protest, instead they sucked it up, studied hard and eventually translated words and concepts to Afrikaans so that their children could have the luxury and the proven benefit of mother tongue educated.

The last time people protested over Afrikaans it said "Liberation before education", today those idiots are in parliament and still cannot read or add up. The joke is one them.

I've studied in English, Afrikaans, German and I am planning to do my post graduate in France later this year, I guess I am also going to put up a banner saying "Afrikaans please or English please" in Paris and see how far that is going to get me when the exams come.
 
We need to get the State out of our universities, with cast-iron guarantees of full liberty and independence. It seems this important principle needs to be rediscovered every century or so.

O for student activists and politicians who will stand for liberty. Haven't seen those for forty years.
 
We need to get the State out of our universities, with cast-iron guarantees of full liberty and independence. It seems this important principle needs to be rediscovered every century or so.

O for student activists and politicians who will stand for liberty. Haven't seen those for forty years.

Most students don't give a damm about these ''activists''. Those that studied degrees that matter.
 
Most students don't give a damm about these ''activists''. Those that studied degrees that matter.
Hehe. There is room for all the disciplines and degrees. I am referring not to the petulant kids shouting "wee dee-mund" while sponging off the taxpayer. I'm calling for earnest and serious students to rouse themselves from their studies and make a stand for real liberty. Of course their primary duty of state is to diligently apply themselves to their studies. But when the integrity of their alma mater is at stake, free adults cannot remain uninvolved. No institution (or society for that matter) can survive when its best go limp and abdicate, withdrawing into their private concerns and agendas. We leave the road open for demagogues and barbarians, which is what we currently have. And they're already inside the gates.
 
The irony is lost on these idiots, when Afrikaners were forced to study in English over a century ago and humiliated by wearing signs that said "I cannot read dutch", they did not protest, instead they sucked it up, studied hard and eventually translated words and concepts to Afrikaans so that their children could have the luxury and the proven benefit of mother tongue educated.

The last time people protested over Afrikaans it said "Liberation before education", today those idiots are in parliament and still cannot read or add up. The joke is one them.

I've studied in English, Afrikaans, German and I am planning to do my post graduate in France later this year, I guess I am also going to put up a banner saying "Afrikaans please or English please" in Paris and see how far that is going to get me when the exams come.
I don't understand why there are not more universities?
Why fight over the 4 the apartheid government built when you could have built at least 4 in the last 20 years.
 
I don't understand why there are not more universities?
Why fight over the 4 the apartheid government built when you could have built at least 4 in the last 20 years.

After the major exercise in rationalising the campuses that we have already gone through?
 
I can't comment on the protests - I spent such a chunk of my own student years in demonstrations and stay-aways

What does seem unfortunate is when students appear too disorganised or lazy to actually go and engage with the university and get a proper dialogue going. The protests should come if the university is seen to be intransigent
 
I can't comment on the protests - I spent such a chunk of my own student years in demonstrations and stay-aways

What does seem unfortunate is when students appear too disorganised or lazy to actually go and engage with the university and get a proper dialogue going. The protests should come if the university is seen to be intransigent

Where on earth did you find the time? I studied engineering and i didn't have time to wipe my butt let alone protest and stay away. All 5 years of it. Didn't once have time to chill on campus and mingle with the fairer gender.
 
Where on earth did you find the time? I studied engineering and i didn't have time to wipe my butt let alone protest and stay away. All 5 years of it. Didn't once have time to chill on campus and mingle with the fairer gender.

I studied engineering and I had time to be involved in many activities i.e. House Committee, Warden, House Parties etc. :p

Jokes aside, engineering is challenging but if you learn to be disciplined, you can find time for other things. Its important to have the right balance at varsity.
 
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After the major exercise in rationalising the campuses that we have already gone through?

Yes, why not more?
Why cry over language when you Leary applied to a Afrikaans majority uni?
It's like applying and being accepted into a Muslim school then complain about the religion, are they that slow or do they just need something to protest about?
Two generations ago boys were sent to war because their fathers lost out on an opportunity to go to war ( which in their fathers eyes were important ) are these the "struggle" generation that has nothing to struggle about
 
What a nettlesome problem. On the one hand I understand the dismay of Afrikaners. Maties is their premier academic institution in the Cape. It is older than the Republic and of course antedates apartheid. The Afrikaans community is rightly proud of the university as a cultural transmitter and as a professional and technical alma mater for their scions.

On the other hand, a goodly portion of the university's costs are paid from the public purse, and in the modern absolutising democratic state Caesar reduces public interest to a crude majoritariansm. It's deeply dismaying when our cultural minorities are marginalised in their own intuitions. It's as if their very identity is being dismantled.

The Afrikaners have graciously surrendered political power. Must they now also see their cultural institutions taken away by 'transformation'?

A wise ruler knows this is the kind of thing that engenders bitterness. But this is neither the place nor the time of wise rulers. It is the time of the Zumas and Malemas. We live in the age of the Pygmy Caesars.

So u reckon Afrikaners need their own varsity...lok a white only varsity
 
Eish you know. I wanted everything that the white man has, but it is too difficult on my own. I do not want to study, you must just give.

This is damn embarrassing!
 
"..How are we supposed to get the degrees we are paying for if we don't understand what is being taught?”


Not "studying towards", paying for.

**** this for an attitude.
 
The Afrikaners have graciously surrendered political power. Must they now also see their cultural institutions taken away by 'transformation'?

There are many mining companies like Iscor who were seen as "Afrikaans culture". In the Iscor example, AngloAmerican took over and insisted that company must be inclusive and therefore English language. Is that taking away Afrikaner culture? Their right to work in a company that embraces their culture?

I ask because while I've seen a lot of Afrikaans people struggled with the language transition, it has eventually benefited many too. Also they seem to continue with their Afrikaans culture in their private space unaffected by the new work culture.
 
Why the F%^K would you enroll in an afrikaans university if you do not understand the language? , these people just need something to toi toi about , its like its built into their DNA
 
So u reckon Afrikaners need their own varsity...lok a white only varsity

The Western Cape population is 70% Afrikaans, which the majority of is not white. There are 3 Universities in the Western Cape, UCT and UWC being english. Shouldn't there be an Afrikaans university that cater for the majority of the inhabitants of the the Western Cape in the Western Cape? The Northen Cape is also mostly Afrikaans, and the two largest Afrikaans speaking population groups there are also not white. Having no Afrikaans universities makes it difficult for those groups as well.
 
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