Sterkspruit lies in the folds of the Maluti Mountains, on a shard of land that once formed part of the former Transkei homeland. Bordered by the Orange River to the north-west, Lesotho to the north-east and Lady Grey to the south, it’s an area seldom visited by tourists despite its natural beauty.
Yet it is home to many. At any given hour, Sterkspruit’s streets are crammed with beat-up bakkies and minibuses, people thronging around wholesalers, fast food joints and roadside stalls.
The first time I ever heard of Sterkspruit was in an apple orchard outside Ceres in the Western Cape, nearly 1 000 km away. When I asked a picker where he was from, the answer was Sterkspruit. All the pickers in the orchard that day were from Sterkspruit, seasonal workers taken there by bus. Back in Sterkspruit, I was told, employment was scarce.
We all have a right to education, but in reality some parts of our country lag behind others and access to a good, affordable school isn’t as straightforward as it might seem in a city. In a rural area like Sterkspruit, the odds are against a child stepping into Bata Toughees aged six, dreaming of graduating with a matric certificate 12 years later.
In the late 1990s, two seasoned educators recognised this problem and turned it into an opportunity. The adventure kicked off in 1998 when Chris and Anna-Marie Oosthuysen rented a room in the old Transido building in town. (Transido was a Transkei-era development corporation that supported entrepreneurs.) Their plan? To open a private school that would help bridge the gap between the struggling rural schools and the blossoming Model C schools of the time. Chris and Anna-Marie wanted to give the youth of Sterkspruit a fighting chance.
This story is from the July 2020 edition of go! - South Africa.
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This story is from the July 2020 edition of go! - South Africa.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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