Scholarships for virgins: Outrage over South Africa 'maiden's bursary'
According to news reports in South Africa, a mayor has come under-fire, after calling for a scholarship applications and insisting is for girls who are 'virgins' only. The news did not go down well, with the South African populace, and most of them took to social media to condemn the Mayor's move; and this was the reply from the Mayor and the 'virgins':
Mayor defends
scholarships for virgins
"We are
keeping away from boys because we want to achieve our goals," Thube says
She's one of the
teenagers being offered free
schooling if she remains a virgin.
District is
trying to reduce teen pregnancy rates; mayor says nothing else has worked
Ladysmith, South
Africa, Soon 18-year-old Thubelihle will leave her home in rural KwaZulu-Natal
to head by bus to attend university in Pretoria.
Thube, as her
friends call her, says her family could not afford college, but help came in
the form of a government scholarship offered by the local uThukela
municipality, one of 11 districts in KwaZulu-Natal province.
The main
requirement -- Thube must remain a virgin.
"We are
keeping away from boys because we want to achieve our goals," says Thube.
"I don't
have children. I am 18 years old, I must study hard to change and conquer the
world."
To qualify for
the so-called "Maiden's Bursary Award," Thube will need to undergo
virginity testing every vacation. A female elder in the community will
determine if she has remained a "maiden" by conducting a manual
inspection, usually on a grass mat.
"You only
have one chance to be a maiden," says Thube.
'Invasive and
sexist'
News of the
virgin-based scholarship has prompted fierce debate in South Africa, with
rights groups saying that it is invasive and sexist.
"The
scholarship promotes stereotypes — that you only get a bursary because you are
a virgin, not based on your capabilities," says Javu Baloyi, of the
Commission on
Gender and Equality.
"There are
better ways of getting an education."
South Africa's
main opposition party has lodged a complaint with the country's human rights
commission and some activists have called it unconstitutional.
But the Mayor
behind the scholarships is standing her ground.
"What I
have noticed about all the critics is that they are not bringing
solutions," says uThukela Mayor Dudu Mazibuko, who says she got pregnant
in high school as a teenager and doesn't want girls to go through the same
struggle.
Mazibuko says
they have tried different ways to stop teenage pregnancies in the schools of
her district, but nothing has worked.
According to the
most recent figures from 2012, KwaZulu-Natal province has the highest rate of
births to teenage mothers in South Africa.
That year, more
than 26,000 babies were born to girls aged between 15 and 19. Some new mothers
were even younger.
High rates of
HIV
uThukela
district still suffers from staggering HIV/AIDS rates -- around half of
pregnant mothers have contracted the disease, according to Mayor Mazibuko's
office.
South Africa has
more than six million people living with HIV, the highest in the world.
"Young
girls are vulnerable. They can't refuse to have sex with an older person. They
cannot even instruct an old man to wear a condom. They are not ready to have
sex," Mazibuko says.
Thube says many
of her high school friends have succumbed to the charms of
"sugar-daddies" who provide money, gifts and favors in return for
sex.
In South Africa,
schoolgirls who get pregnant are encouraged to finish their education, but in practice
many drop out and never return.
Last year, in a
speech to traditional leaders -- who still hold significant power in rural
parts of the country -- South Africa's president Jacob Zuma said teenagers who
got pregnant should be separated from their infants and sent to finish their
studies at Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was jailed.
'We don't make
virgins'
Mayor Mazibuko
says the idea for the scholarship came from the girls themselves, who had
banded together in preparation for the annual reed-dance held at the eNyokeni
Royal Palace in Nongoma, KwaZulu-Natal.
A group of Zulu
women carry reeds to the royal palace during the annual reed-dance ceremony.
"We don't
make the virgins, they were already starting up groups," she says.
Held every year in
September, the reed-dance was introduced in South Africa in the early 1990s by
King Goodwill Zwelethini to promote abstinence in the face of the HIV epidemic.
It's attended by
young Zulu women who must first pass virginity tests within their communities.
However, the
tests have done little to curb rampant HIV infection and teenage pregnancy in
the past decade, and for many South African women, the reed-dance is
anachronistic and offensive.
But for Thube,
remaining a virgin is one way to stay safe.
"This is my
choice," she says.
And here in KwaZulu-Natal, the virgin
scholarship is her only real chance of getting an education
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