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Oprah Winfrey Opens School for Girls in South Africa
By The Associated Press
January 02, 2007
Talk-show queen Oprah Winfrey
opened a world-class school for poor but talented South African girls Tuesday,
fulfilling a long-cherished dream and a promise to her hero, Nelson
Mandela.
"I wanted to give this opportunity
to girls who had a light so bright that not even poverty could dim that light,"
Winfrey said, declaring that it was "the proudest, gravest day of my
life."
Former President Mandela was
invited to be among the dignitaries at the opening of the lavish Oprah Winfrey
Leadership Academy for Girls in the small town of Henley-on-Klip, south of
Johannesburg. He was among a string of international celebrities expected to
attend--though the list was kept secret and journalists were kept away from the
guests.
The $40-million academy aims to
give 152 girls from deprived backgrounds a quality education in a country where
schools are struggling to overcome the legacy of apartheid. For more on South Africa, read the
Jan./Feb. 2006 issue of DiversityInc
magazine.
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Eventually the school will
accommodate 450 girls.
Winfrey said at a press conference
that she hoped that by educating girls she would help "change the face of a
nation."
"Girls who are educated are less
likely to get HIV/AIDS and in this country which has such a pandemic, we have to
begin to change the pandemic," she said.
Many of the girls come from
families affected by the disease, which has infected 5.4 million of the
population of 48 million and has hit women disproportionately
hard.
Winfrey referred repeatedly to her
own impoverished childhood and said she was grateful that she at least had a
good education.
"I was a poor girl who grew up
with my grandmother, like so many of these girls, with no water and
electricity," said the talk-show host, dressed in a shocking pink ball gown and
jacket.
She vowed to make the academy the
"best school in the world" and promised that she would continue to support the
girls so they could attend any university in the world.
The idea for the school was born
in 2000 at a meeting between Winfrey and anti-apartheid icon Mandela. She said
she decided to build the academy in South Africa rather than the United States
out of love and respect for Mandela and because of her own African
roots.
She said she planned a second
school for boys and girls in the eastern province of
KwazuluNatal.
Built on 52 acres, the 28-building
campus, which was originally to cost $10 million, resembles a luxury hotel more
than the rundown schools most of the girls know. It boasts state-of-the-art
classrooms, computer and science laboratories, a library, theater and wellness
center. Each girl has a two-bedroom suite.
Winfrey rejected suggestions that
her school was elitist and unnecessarily luxurious.
"If you are surrounded by
beautiful things and wonderful teachers who inspire you, that beauty brings out
the beauty in you," she said.
She said she chose "every brick
tile, sheet and spoon" and even lay in the beds to check on the right distance
for the light switch.
The result was a far cry from the
grim state-funded schools, especially in the sprawling townships that sprang up
under white racist rule, which are hopelessly overcrowded and lack even basic
facilities like books. They are also plagued by gang violence, drugs and a high
rate of pregnancy among school girls.
Despite government efforts to
improve the school system, the education department said last week that
two-thirds of the 1,667,000 children who started school 12 years ago dropped
out, and only five percent of the total intake did well enough in their studies
to be eligible to go to university. The class started in 1994, the year of the
country's first multiracial elections, and its members were dubbed "Madiba's
Children" after the clan name for Mandela, who came to power with the onset of
democracy.
Winfrey selected the 11- to
12-year-old girls from 3,500 applications across the country. To qualify, they
had to show both academic and leadership potential and have a household income
of no more than 5,000 rands (US$787) a month.
"I went to their homes. I met
their teachers and their parents. I know all of them by name. Their story is my
story," she declared.
Winfrey, who is childless, said
she was building a home for herself on the campus to spend time with the girls
and be involved in their education.
"I love these girls with every
part of my being. I didn't know you could feel this way about other people's
children." (AP)
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