Assignment 4
(Detailed Response)
Due 22 August 2025
, HED4805
Assignment 4 (Detailed Response)
Due 22 August 2025
Question 1: “People’s education for people’s power” and Its Misrepresentation
During the Anti-Apartheid Struggle
The slogan “People’s education for people’s power” emerged prominently within South
Africa’s anti-apartheid movement during the 1980s. It encapsulated a revolutionary
vision that education functions as a vital tool for liberation, social empowerment, and the
assertion of collective agency. Rooted in the broader ideological framework of
resistance against systemic racial oppression, the slogan challenged the apartheid
regime’s racially segregated and inferior education policies, notably exemplified by the
Bantu Education Act of 1953, which aimed to entrench colonial and racial hierarchies
through deliberately inferior schooling for Black South Africans (Seroto et al., 2020).
This rallying cry originated within grassroots movements such as the National Education
Crisis Committee (NECC) and other community-based initiatives committed to
reclaiming education as a space for cultural affirmation, self-determination, and political
consciousness—concepts aligned with Paulo Freire’s (1970) idea of conscientization. It
called for an education that fostered critical awareness and collective empowerment,
positioning learners as active agents of change rather than passive recipients of state-
controlled curricula.
However, the apartheid government and its supporters misrepresented this radical
slogan for political expediency. They propagated narratives linking “People’s education”
to communism, subversion, and chaos—strategies designed to delegitimize grassroots
movements and justify repression (Kies, 1953). State-controlled media amplified these
distortions, framing the movement as disorderly and violent, thereby obscuring the non-
violent, community-driven essence of the struggle. This misrepresentation served to
undermine the legitimacy of the movement’s aims and to reinforce colonial stereotypes
depicting African resistance as inherently disruptive.
Today, the slogan’s legacy persists in debates around curriculum decolonization, social
justice, and educational equity, emphasizing the importance of viewing education as a