
Timed perfectly with Youth Month, the annual Embrace Symposium recently brought together 100 delegates from 24 different schools to address the future of our nation by putting youth-centred education at the very heart of the conversation.
The conference, hosted by St Benedict’s College, established a powerful call to action for South African educators to actively integrate local heritage into modern schooling. Rather than treating inclusion as a vague ideal, the event challenged teachers to practically rethink the everyday classroom environment so that every child feels a deep sense of belonging and can thrive as their authentic self.
This year’s theme, “Let’s Meet Under the Tree: Using Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Pedagogy as Pathways to Social Healing in Education,” tackled a vital conversation. While Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) can sound highly academic, the core concept is straightforward: weaving traditional African wisdom, local customs, languages, and community-focused ways of learning into the mainstream school system.
School leadership recognised that because the core mission of schooling is learning and growth, it is vital to review and adapt traditional curricula through a South African-specific lens, bringing local knowledge systems into everyday learning.
Redefining Indigenous Knowledge to Create a True Home
The programme explored how IKS can foster everyday psychological safety. In a powerful presentation, psychologist Erick Kabongo reframed the definition of IKS, describing it as the profound wisdom and worldview existing entirely outside of textbooks—passed down through language, oral storytelling, family structures, and community.
Ultimately, Kabongo challenged the room to consider whether mainstream schools are genuinely making space for this wisdom or quietly erasing it. He redefined “indigenous” not merely as a historical label, but as that which makes a person feel at home. True transformation, he noted, requires the daily normalisation of diverse stories and practices, rather than just symbolic recognition on Heritage Day.
Putting Belonging into Practice: Overcoming Traditional Hurdles
This profound call to make schools a psychological “home” was directly linked to real-world institutional change by St Benedict’s Executive Head, Andre Oosthuysen. Reflecting the host school’s commitment to driving transformation from the top down, Oosthuysen shared how the institution has adopted a completely open hair policy, allowing boys to wear Afros, dreadlocks, or ponytails as an authentic expression of personal identity.
“A boy’s hair is his halo. As long as hair does not disrupt a boy’s academic efforts, it should not be overly policed.” — Andre Oosthuysen, Executive Head
However, implementing these changes requires confronting deep cultural inertia. The hair policy has sparked backlash from some parents and alumni who view the shift as a decline in discipline, despite student behaviour remaining unchanged. Oosthuysen also discussed his attempt to remove compulsory attendance at rugby matches, believing the sport’s dominant status can undermine broader school values. Despite these traditional hurdles and the resistance met when deviating from historical moulds, the school maintains its commitment to individual expression, allowing boys to run onto the sports field with their hair as their glory.
Reclaiming Language and Identity
Professor Connie Makgabo, an academic and experienced educator at SALNS, presented a vision where classrooms evolve from rigid academic spaces into emotionally safe environments. She criticised the colonial legacy of using English as the primary Language of Learning and Teaching (LOLT), noting that linguistic exclusion fosters deep-seated shame among non-English-speaking learners. Demanding a radical shift toward language revitalisation, she stated that “teaching without healing is like watering a stone.”
Attorney and teacher Chris Harrison turned the spotlight further onto language, warning against a concerning trend where parents who speak African languages choose to speak only English at home, resulting in a thin home language that undermines a child’s cognitive development. He challenged elite education to stop devaluing mother tongues and urged white South Africans to actively learn local languages to break out of monolingual complacency.
Shifting the Centre: Brave Spaces
Upper school History teacher Tebogo Maneli delivered a powerful, deeply personal call for a fundamental shift toward African-centeredness. Drawing on the concept of institutional spaces, Maneli asserted that educational environments cannot always be entirely safe, but they must always be brave. She urged educators to cultivate containers where uncomfortable, rigorous conversations about race, systemic gatekeeping, and identity can openly take place without turning to automatic defensiveness.
Part of this bravery involves confronting imported linguistic trends that water down local reality. Maneli offered a sharp critique of the phrase “people of colour,” arguing that such terminology inadvertently centres whiteness as the default human experience. Instead, she advocated for direct, honest language, urging South African schools to explicitly name and validate distinct identities: Black, white, coloured, and Indian.
From Empathy to Truth
The profound impact an empathetic educator can have was brought to life by media personality and broadcaster Dan Corder, who shared his personal journey as an unconventional child with generalised AuDHD (autism and ADHD) who struggled with severe social anxiety and a debilitating stutter.
He credited his high school debating coaches and teachers with saving his life simply by responding to his eccentricities with empathy, patience, and humour. Corder urged independent and religious schools to leverage their moral authority to break out of performative compliance and elite isolationism, transforming their institutional power into real community engagement and radical, active support for under-resourced schools.
Shared Experiences and Lived Belonging
The opportunity for open, honest dialogue extended directly into the breakout sessions, where delegates from different schools and backgrounds shared ideas for taking these learnings back to their own institutions. While parents seldom see this level of behind-the-scenes dedication, the delegates demonstrated that they are the passionate custodians of their children’s education, driven by a fierce desire to see a change that helps learners thrive.
Ultimately, the Embrace Symposium demonstrated that true transformation is not about symbolic recognition on Heritage Day, but about moving toward lived, daily belonging where every student can bring their full self to school.
These vital, transformative conversations were made possible thanks to this year’s sponsor, Motus Bedfordview, whose support ensured these essential educational dialogues could take place. Next year, the Embrace Symposium will be back to tackle even more difficult, necessary topics that must be spotlighted to make real change happen in South African education.
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