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South African teacher fights suspension over 'segregated' class

Wednesday January 16 2019
sa racism

The pupils were attending their first day at the Schweizer-Reneke school in North West province when the teacher took a photograph to send to anxious parents. PHOTO | COURTESY

By AFP

A South African primary school teacher on Tuesday vowed to fight her suspension after she took a photograph of black children sitting separately from white children in her class.

The photo rapidly spread on social media and caused outrage as it showed about 17 white children sitting around a large table, with four black children around a small corner table in the background.

Elana Barkhuizen was suspended from her job at the Schweizer-Reneke school in North West province.

She told reporters that the photograph of "a class full of happy, smiling children on their first day of school was used by opportunists against my children, against me and against my school."

"I had to endure insults and I was told that I may never teach again," Ms Barkhuizen said.

The Solidarity trade union, which is mainly made up of white Afrikaners, said the children had been seated by language, not race.

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"They had to make little ones, who don't speak English or Afrikaans, only Tswana, feel at home," it said in a statement.

"They are educationists and they know that the most important thing on a first day is to make little ones feel secure in their new environment."

Race relations remain tense in South Africa 25 years after the end of white-minority apartheid rule, with fierce racist controversies erupting regularly on social media and in politics.

Solidarity said it would submit court papers to have Ms Barkhuizen's suspension lifted.

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