The Christian Science Monitor

In South Africa, a push to reclaim an Afrikaans as diverse as its speakers

Willa Boezak, a Khoi San scholar and activist, has written books about the Afrikaans language. Afrikaans is the third-most commonly spoken language in South Africa, and the first language of about 7 million of its 50 million people.

When a wave of student protests began crashing over South Africa’s universities in mid-2015, it didn’t take long to reach the doors of Stellenbosch University.

A stately campus nestled among the vineyards and mountains near Cape Town, with a student body that was 60 percent white in a country where nine in 10 people are not, “Stellies” was an obvious target for students angry with the educational status-quo. And its protestors had one grievance in particular: language.

“Being taught in Afrikaans, going to class and not understanding – these have all been part of how Stellenbosch has excluded me as a black student,” a PhD student named Mwabisa Makaluza explained to a South African paper at the time, referring to the local language that was heavily used by the apartheid government.

The implication was clear: Afrikaans was for white people. And since Stellenbosch still taught most of its courses in Afrikaans, it was slamming the door on students who weren’t.

But as Willa Boezak watched the TV footage

Worldwide rootsLanguage of repression, language of home'Pride in who I am'

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