AP
Oprah Winfrey talks to students at her Leadership Academy for Girls at Henley-On-Klip South Africa, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012 on the eve of the first graduation at her school. Winfrey makes no apologies for spending millions on an elite school for underpriviledged South Africa girls but is also looking for ways to make her money stretch further to help more struggling Africans. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell)
Oprah Winfrey makes no apologies for spending millions on an elite school for underprivileged South African girls. But she's also looking for ways to make her money stretch further to help more struggling Africans.
Winfrey spoke Friday on the eve of the first graduation at her school. Of the 75 students who started at the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in 2007, 72 who will graduate Saturday.
All are headed to universities in South Africa and the United States to pursue such studies as medicine, law, engineering and economics.
Across South Africa, more than half a million members of the class of 2011 disappeared before the 496,000 remaining took their final exams. Only a quarter of those who graduated did well enough to qualify for university study.
“We're taking a victory lap here, for transformation,” Winfrey said. “Every single girl is going to leave here with something greater to offer the world than her body.”
South Africa is struggling to overcome the inequalities of apartheid, which ended in 1994. The country has too few schools at all levels, and many lack such basics as libraries and are staffed by undereducated teachers.
School girls walk at the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in Henley-on-Klip, outside Johannesburg January 12, 2012. Winfrey feels a new freedom after leaving her wildly successful daily TV talk show behind and taking a new course seeking interviews with newsmakers on their own turf. "I love the freedom of not being tethered to that chair and having to do an interview based upon filling a quota on a number of shows," Winfrey told Reuters in South Africa, where she will attend at the weekend the first graduation of high school seniors from her Oprah Winfrey Leadership for Girls. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
Reuters
Earlier this week, a stampede at a Johannesburg university campus killed a mother who had accompanied her son to an in-person application day. Thousands were vying for a few hundred spots at the university.
Winfrey, who spent $40 million on her campus, said her focus was “just to change one girl, affect one person's life.” But she acknowledged hers “is not a sustainable model for most people in most countries.”
Another new class starts at Winfrey's school next week. But to help more young Africans, Winfrey said she would be working with established philanthropies to identify schools around the developing world that can be strengthened with money.
She hopes to adapt some of the practices of her school, including creating strong support networks for students.
“It takes a lot of support, it takes a whole team,” she said, saying teachers and communities would have to be active participants.
Her focus on girls was not among the strategies she would change. Winfrey said studies have shown helping girls helps entire communities, in part because girls and women give back so much.
Oprah Winfrey talks to the Associated Press at her Leadership Academy for Girls at Henley-On-Klip South Africa, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012 on the eve of the first graduation at her school. Winfrey makes no apologies for spending millions on an elite school for underpriviledged South Africa girls but is also looking for ways to make her money stretch further to help more struggling Africans. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell)
AP
“I know what it's like to be a poor girl with your heart's desire to do well in the world,” she added. “I chose to use my philanthropy to do what I know.”
Winfrey said she also might work more quietly in the future, to spare those she helps the kind of scrutiny celebrity draws.
The achievements at Winfrey's school came despite turmoil in its first years.
A woman working as a dormitory matron at the school was accused of abusing teenagers soon after it was opened. She was acquitted in 2010. Winfrey, who has spoken of being abused as a child and called the allegations against the matron crushing, and has said the trial's outcome was “profoundly” disappointing.
Winfrey settled a defamation lawsuit filed in Philadelphia by the school's former headmistress, Nomvuyo Mzamane, who claimed Winfrey defamed her in remarks made in the wake of the scandal.
Last year, a baby born to a student at the school was found dead. The events would have been newsworthy had they involved any school, but drew particularly frenzied attention because of the Winfrey connection.
As a celebrity, Winfrey said: “All of your mistakes are amplified and show up on the evening news.”
Winfrey said there were times when she wondered if her project would fail, but she could not give up, both for herself and for Nelson Mandela, who she says inspired her to build the school.
South Africa's education problems result from decades of blacks being denied resources and dignity under apartheid. Since the dawn of multiracial democracy in 1994, progress in righting the educational and other wrongs of the past has been slow and fitful.
Graeme Bloch, an education specialist at Johannesburg's University of the Witwatersrand, said he is among those who worry elite schools like Winfrey's can produce elitists. But he praised Winfrey for trying to ensure her students understood they needed to give back to their communities.
The Winfrey students, who call their school's founder Mam Oprah, lectured in their communities about AIDS, created and ran breast cancer awareness campaigns, even picked up trash in the streets of Henley-on-Klip, where the school is located.
Winfrey's was among just 544 out of some 6,500 South African schools whose entire graduating class passed national final year exams last year. Many of the schools with a 100 percent pass rate were either private like Winfrey's, or among the best public schools that had been reserved for whites under apartheid and received the bulk of public school funding.
Black students attend South Africa's elite schools - on scholarship or because their families are among an emerging black middle and upper class. But Winfrey's is among the few top schools that can say all the students it shepherded through the exams were from poor families, most of them black.
Laurence Corner directs the Student Sponsorship Programme, which for the past decade has raised funds from corporations and individuals to place promising students from South Africa's poorest communities in its best schools.
Corner said that while his own program and schools like Winfrey's can enroll relatively few students, they have wide impact.
Entire communities start to see their young people have potential, and people are inspired to become philanthropists, he said.
“It's very important for disadvantaged communities to have role models from their own communities,” he said. - Sapa-AP
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Deborah, wrote
Oprah is very racist. It is blatantly obvious if you have ever watched any of her shows. I gave up watching her years ago because of this. Her attitude towards Whites is tainted with bitterness and hatred. Why isn't she helping the children here in the USA instead of being the do-gooder and going around the world like the rest of these celebrities. We have children here (black and white) who could benefit from all those dollars that are being sent out of the country. Africa needs to learn to fend for itself. It seems that it always needs a handout for something!
Mr. So and So, wrote
Wow! Such negative comments. I dare say, the effects of years of racial poisoning, and, typically South African. Let's look at some positives here. A handful of underprivileged girls, have been given a hand up in an extremely sexist and competitive world. Surely that's good for the community and the country where education for the masses is under pressure? Even after facing a number of hurdles, the school is still open and girls are graduating. Instead of being cynical, why not take a leaf from Oprah and Tata, and try help those who are less fortunate.
Anna, wrote
Yes Precious, I think that would achieve more results across the spectrum. It is not the fancy technology in the classroom that is going to help the child succeed, it is the teacher that is going to make the child succeed, therefore, more good teachers in the poorest conditions could still achieve the same result. It just takes dedicated manpower. South Africa has the man power, we just need to work on the desire and the dedication!
Rad, wrote
Pity that winfrey's school is racist and sexist....bad example to be setting! Perhaps someone should explain to the arrogant woman that South Africa is diverse and that there are not only black women in this country, and that its not only blacks that are poor. But then again, when you have the cash and you want to pull publicity stunts then you can do what you please, even if it means coming into a foreign country and insulting your hosts. She has been exposed as a fat liar in the past, so her reasons for her so called 'charity' are questionable!
Precious, wrote
Who were the teachers at the school. Surely they deserve to be praised. She should rather start a school for educators to teach. Give a man a fish and he will eat for one day...Teach a man to fish and he will eat everyday.
jason, wrote
oprah Winfrey is the worst racist in the world, why has she not helped her own black people in america! She only is here to suck up to nelson mandela! She has no interest in blacks, if she did why isnt she doing this in the USA! Why are there no whites in this school, she is doing exactly what she said she was against segregation, yet it is ok for blacks to have a school only for blacks, black economic empowerment etc etc but whites cannot have anything for whites only because then you are called a racist, these liberals are the worst racists in the world!
Anonymous, wrote
Just more publicity of Oprah! She should take the street kids as her first priority and deal with them. They are the most underprivileged kids. No parents, no homes, no food least of all education!! Some of these kids are not bad at all, just might be ill and need ongoing medication which they don't receive from government. It's a shame she can choose who she thinks in "underprivileged" or not. Catch a wake up Oprah. So many kids of all races are underprivileged. Just because you're rich, you have the power to choose. Shame on you.
Okay, wrote
@Eric: The article says they are headed for universities in South Africa and USA. Make your point without lying.
Eric, wrote
Not a single underprivileged white girl in that school? And they are all going to study in the USA! What is wrong with SA universities? They are good enough for the so-called privileged kids. Oprah is a racist! Finish en klaar!
Dukie 743, wrote
Lets hope that Winfrey includes underpriviledged boys as well girls in future schemes. I always get the feeling with Winfrey that she leans strongly to women and girls in preference as opposed to men and boys. This is possibly because of her earlier life as portrayed in the film 'The Colour Purple.'
Anonymous, wrote
Very likely that Oprah's great-great grandmother was given aid and comfort by some inner city African American child's great-great grandmother and that helped Oprah to become the success she is today. To bad she forgot that it takes took this African American village to get her where she is today. She should have repaid the African American community by building the school in the inner city and honor the great-great grandparents who helped her blood line.
George, wrote
Not to stir the proverbial diverse race pot of south Africa, but may I ask have there been any white, Indian coloured children included in this school or was it developed exclusively for Africans'? Let it be known there are plenty of other races underprivileged loving in south Africa unable to afford basic conditions, less housing, food and education.
Anonymous, wrote
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