<div dir="ltr"><h1 itemprop="headline">Stellenbosch agrees to keep Afrikaans</h1><div class=""><span class=""><a href="http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts">news/crime-courts</a></span><span> / </span><div class=""><div class="">13 February 2016 at 14:57pm</div></div></div><span class=""><i>By:</i><span> </span><b itemprop="author">Fatima Schroeder</b></span><p>Cape
Town - Afrikaans has returned to Stellenbosch University as a medium of
instruction after a Western Cape High Court dispute over the issue with
activist group AfriForum Youth was settled on Friday.</p><p>As a result
of the settlement, a group of nine English-speaking students, who are
at various stages of their studies at the university, abandoned their
bid to intervene in the proceedings.</p><p>But their attorney, Mandy Mudarikwa of the Legal Resources Centre, said they were still considering their options.</p><p>In
affidavits they filed before abandoning their application, the students
said they had difficulty following lectures presented in Afrikaans, and
many found that the use of interpretation devices did not improve the
situation.</p><p>One student had stopped attending classes.</p><p>Some
said they last used Afrikaans at primary school level, while one student
said she could not follow the “academic Afrikaans” used during
lectures.</p><p>Another student, Rabia Abba Omar, said she had attended
school in Joburg and had lived in Muscat, Oman, and Abu Dhabi in the
United Arab Emirates.</p><p>She had no knowledge of or ability to speak,
write or understand Afrikaans and often had to ask fellow students to
explain the lessons.</p><p>Thokozani Chili, a third-year engineering student, said her home language was Zulu.</p><p>“I
could not follow the content of the class because the translations were
hard to follow, since I could hear both the translator and the lecturer
at the same time.”</p><p>She said she had been forced to leave the university.</p><p>Philemon
Mogale, a final-year engineering student, said meetings in residences
were conducted exclusively in Afrikaans, “which fed into the racist
traditions which permeated many of the more traditionally Afrikaner
residences”.</p><p>The language controversy began last year, when
student activist movement Open Stellenbosch lobbied for the introduction
of English as the medium of instruction.</p><p>AfriForum took the issue
to court after the university’s engineering and law faculties decided
last month to use English as the primary language of instruction. This,
they claimed, was in conflict with the university’s language policy.</p><p>The
matter was settled on Friday after the university gave AfriForum a
written undertaking that steps would be taken to ensure all faculties
implement the university’s language policy and plan, as well as the
language specifications published in the 2016 yearbook.</p><p>This meant Afrikaans would have equal status to English as a medium of instruction, AfriForum Youth said.</p><p><a href="http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/stellenbosch-agrees-to-keep-afrikaans-1984129">http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/stellenbosch-agrees-to-keep-afrikaans-1984129</a><br></p><br clear="all"><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature">**************************************<br>N.b.: Listing on the lgpolicy-list is merely intended as a service to its members<br>and implies neither approval, confirmation nor agreement by the owner or sponsor of the list as to the veracity of a message's contents. Members who disagree with a message are encouraged to post a rebuttal, and to write directly to the original sender of any offensive message. A copy of this may be forwarded to this list as well. (H. Schiffman, Moderator)<br><br>For more information about the lgpolicy-list, go to <a href="https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/" target="_blank">https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/</a><br>listinfo/lgpolicy-list<br>*******************************************</div>
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