Open Journal of Philosophy 2013. Vol.3, No.2, 337-344 Published Online May 2013 in SciRes (http://www.scirp.org/journal/ojpp) http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojpp.2013.32051 Copyright © 2013 SciRes. 337 Educating for Ubuntu/Botho: Lessons from Basotho Indigenous Education Moeketsi Letseka Department of Edu c at io na l F ou n dations, College of Education, University of South Africa, Pretor ia, South Africa Email: letsem@unisa.ac.za Received December 8th, 2012; revised January 10th, 2013; accepted January 24th, 2013 Copyright © 2013 Moeketsi Letseka. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons At- tribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This article reflects on shocking and horrifying incidents of moral indiscretion that have become com- monplace in South Africa. The aim is to understand why human beings would carry out such shocking and horrific acts on fellow human beings. The article draws on Dismas Masolo’s book Self and Commu- nity in a Changing World to unpack the notion of personhood. It draws lessens on Basotho indigenous education. The choice of Basotho indigenous education is premised on the assumption that it is the au- thor’s own native knowledge with which he is most familiar, and about which he can write uninhibitedly. Keywords: Ubuntu/Botho; Personhood; Humanness; Basotho Indigenous Education; Morality; Moral Indiscretion Introduction On a daily basis homes, schools, work places and public spaces are bombarded by reports from the public media—the radio, television and print media on violent crime, murder, rape, assault, police brutality and similar moral indiscret ions. A mor- ally discerning person [however we define such a person] will be distressed upon listening to accounts of such moral indiscre- tion on the radio, watching their images on television or reading newspaper reports on them. This is because such reports raise serious questions about what it means to be moral, and how ought we to treat others. The title of ethicist Neil Levy’s book What Makes us Moral? is most pertinent to the issues I am grappling with in this article. Levy (2004: p. 41) acknowledges that defining morality is no easy task. However, it is his con- tention that a moral system must be devoted, largely if not wholly, to a concern for the welfare of other people. Thus for Levy (2004: p. 44), a morality must systematize norms of jus- tice and fairness and prescribe equal treatment for everyone. In this article I explore ways in which ubuntu/botho, understood as morality (Metz, 2007), humaneness (Mokgoro, 1998), and personhood (Letseka, 2000) can be taught with a view to “cre- ating citizens”1 that are initiated in ubuntu/botho dispositions. I imagine such citizens to be inclined to treating others with jus- tice and fairness at all times. In a recent article in The Chronicle of Higher Education Barry Schwartz and Kenneth Sharpe (2012) argue that as important as it is to teach students how to think critically and analytically, another fundamental that is largely neglected is the development of the intellectual virtues that students need to be good citizens. For Schwartz and Sharpe (2012), such virtues would entail the love of truth, honesty, courage, fairness, and wisdom. I shall argue that Basotho in- digenous education sought to instruct the young people on mak- habane (virtues) such as hard work, respect for persons, humil- ity, perseverance, service to the nation, and patriotism. What is missing from the above-mentioned accounts of moral indiscre- tion is the notion of respect for persons and acknowledgement of the principles of the “golden rule”. The notion of ubuntu/botho has been widely theorized (Let- seka, 2012, 2000; Metz, 2011, 2007; Bessler, 2008; Ramose, 2006, 2002, 1999; Broodryk, 2002; Sindane, 1994; Mokgoro, 1998; Shutte, 1994). On the one hand Ramose (2006) contends that ubuntu/botho represents the epistemological paradigm that informs the cultural practices, including the law, of Bantu- speaking peoples. While Broodryk (2002) conceives of ubuntu/ botho as a comprehensive ancient African worldview based on the values of humanness, caring, sharing, respect, compassion and associated values, ensuring a happy and qualitative human community life in a spirit of family. On the other hand Enslin and Horsthemke (2004) express doubts about the viability of ubuntu/botho as a model for citizenship education in African democracies, while Marx (2002) casts ubuntu/botho as an in- vented tradition whose task is to minimize historical chasms and fractures. Others have either offered a defense of ubuntu/ botho (Letseka, 2012), or argued a case for ubuntu/botho as a moral theory (Metz & Gaie, 2010; Metz, 2007; Teffo, 1994), and as a public policy (Nkondo, 2007). 1I borrow the idea of “creating citizens”from Eamonn Callan’s (1997) book, Creating Citizens: Political Education and Liberal Democracy. Callan (1997: p. 3) advocates a political culture in which there is an active com- mitment to the good of the polity, confidence and competence in judgements regarding how that good should be advanced, and a respect for fellow citi- zens as well as a sense of common fate with them that goes beyond the tribalisms of ethnicity and religion and is yet alive to the significancethese will have in many people’s lives. What I attempt to do in this article, which is a contribution to the debate in philosophy of education and African philosophy
M. LETSEKA in South Africa, as well as a sequel to my previous contribution to this debate2, is to explore ways in which young people in schools and communities in South Africa can be initiated into ubuntu/botho moral dispositions. I shall draw on Masolo’s (2010, 2004, 2003) articulation of the notion of personhood to argue that educating for ubuntu/botho should entail equipping young people with the kinds of attributes and dispositions that enable them to live lives that are anchored in communal under- standings of personhood and humaneness. It is my contention that educating the young people for ubuntu/botho is sine qua non to addressing the social and cultural challenges of contem- porary South Africa, which continues to be marked by the ab- sence of a shared moral discourse (Morrow, 2007) and intoler- ance (Gibson & Gouws, 2005). The article is structured around five sections. First, I sketch media reports on a number of moral indiscretions that shock and horrify. My aim is to reflect on why human beings would do such shocking and horrifying deeds to fellow human beings. Second, I explore ways in which the notion of ubuntu/botho might respond to the above-mentioned incidents of moral in- discretion. Third, I tease out conceptions of personhood draw- ing on the work of Masolo (2010, 2004). Fourth, I sketch Ba- sotho “indigenous education” (Matšela, 1990, 1979) and draw lessons from it that can be learned for framing a conception of education for ubuntu/botho in contemporary South Africa. Ma- solo (2010: p. 21) argues that the term “indigenous” defines the origin of an item or person in relation to how their belonging to a place is to be temporally characterized, especially in com- parison to other contenders in claiming belonging. One might ask: but why Basotho indigenous education? If I could, I would happily write about Zulu indigenous education or Xhosa in- digenous education, or any other ethnic group’s indigenous education for that matter. But I cannot. Like Kwasi Wiredu and Kwame Gyekye who have written extensively on Akan notions of morality and personhood, which is their own native knowl- edge and one about which they can write uninhibitedly, I am a Mosotho who was brought up in a traditional Sotho homestead in rural Lesotho. Realistically therefore, I can offer my readers an account of Basotho indigenous education which is likewise my own native knowledge with which I am most familiar, and about which I can write uninhibitedly. I take education to be more than just schooling, but to also encompass transmission of the culture(s) of society from one generation to the other (Ad- eyinka, 1993). But I am also persuaded that educating the young people should entail exposing them to other cultures be- sides the cultures in which they are born and bred. In the final section I offer some concluding remarks. Incidents of Moral Indiscretion A young mother is gunned down by two masked men on a motorcycle after dropping her five-year-old son at a crèche (Hosken, 2011); a man charged with the brutal murder of a ten- year old girl for her body parts to be used for muti is sentenced to life imprisonment (Dlamini, 2011); a mob sets alight and kills an elderly couple whom it accused of practicing witchcraft (Mkamba, 2012); four men are jailed for eighteen years each by a Cape Town Court for stabbing and stoning a 19-year girl to death for being a lesbian (Pretoria News, 2012). The above- mentioned incidents are shocking and horrifying. They cause a morally discerning person to pause and wonder what happens to human beings when they carry out such shocking and horri- fying acts on fellow human beings, and to speculate on how society ought to resp o n d to such incidents. In a newspaper commentary titled “Socializing our boys to be better men” Rhema Church senior Pastor Ray McCauley (2012) notes that “three acts of rape in our country in the past two weeks call into question the type of society we have be- come. More importantly, they call for urgent action and com- munity mobilization against these ever-increasing inhumane and barbaric acts against often defenseless women and chil- dren”. McCauley (2012) recounts the gang rape of a 17-year- old mentally ill girl in Soweto; the rape by a girl and a woman, of a 17-year-old mentally ill boy, again in Soweto, and a 15- year-old boy who raped, bit and gouged the eyes of an 8-year- old girl in KwaZulu-Natal. McCauley suggests that “we need to deal with this shame among us not necessarily as a response to the negative image created about us internationally, but because fundamentally we reject any form of violence against women, children and the vulnerable among us”. He makes three impor- tant observations: first, the incidents cited show that a sub- culture of rape and violence is taking root (if it hasn’t already) among our boys. Second, the coercive sexual behavior against the vulnerable (in this case the mentally disturbed and children) continues. And third, though in South Africa we seldom talk about female-on-male rape, the rape of boys by women is be- ginning to surface and could be happening more often than society cares to admit. McCauley contends that the stereotypi- cal behaviors of boys are not obtained by birth. Rather, they are acquired as the boys keep growing. He is concerned that this raises the issue of the kind of values that fathers and men in general impart to their boys, the kind of role models the boys can emulate, and the role schools, through a deliberate curricu- lum ought to play. For McCauley, gender equality and respect for the opposite sex should be systematically woven into the school curriculum if we are to socialize our boys to be better men. I couldn’t agree more. As I will show in the pen-ultimate section of this article Masolo (2010) rejects cultures that teach children that males are more valuable than females. Personally I reject the gendering of roles which privileges one gender over the other. What I am trying to understand in this article is ways in which individuals ought to treat one another. For instance, what should frame the ways in which we ought to treat one another, and in turn how ought others to treat us were they to find them- selves in circumstance that put their conduct on the spotlight? The reader will notice that I use the notion of “ought” to make a case for moral conduct. The reason for this, Scottish philoso- pher Alasdair MacIntyre (1959: p. 457) explains, is that the notion of “ought” is only explicable in terms of the notion of a consensus of interest. To say that we ought to do something is to affirm that there is a commonly accepted rule; and the exis- tence of such a rule presupposes a consensus of opinion as to where our common interests lie. Thus the concept of “ought” is logically dependent on the concept of a common interest and can only be explained in terms of it. Greenspan (2007: p. 172) concurs. She argues that “when we say that someone morally ought not to harm others, perhaps all we are saying is that he has a certain kind of reason not to, one that wins out against any opposing reasons such as those touting benefits to him of ig- noring others’ concerns”. Thus “the good” or “what ought to be” does not reside in some abstracted, conceptual “moral or- 2See Moeketsi Letseka (2012) “In Defence of Ubuntu”, Studies in Philoso- h and Education, 31 1 , 47-60. Copyright © 2013 SciRes. 338
M. LETSEKA der” with its own existence “out there” but occurs in specific instances in which persons discover what is right to do and then do it (Crysdale, 1987: p. 105). Australian moral philosopher Peter Singer provides useful insights here. In his two books, Writings on an Ethical Life and How are we to live? Ethics in an Age of Self-interest, Singer (2002, 1997) expounds on what ought to shape our moral atti- tudes and humane treatment of others. He picks out four critical sayings on the “moral law” or the “golden rule”, which he sug- gests ought to guide the way we treat others at all times: “Love thy neigh bor as yourself” (Jesus). “What is hateful to you do not do to your neighbor” (Rabbi Hillel). “What you do not want done to yourself, do not do to others” (Confucius). “Let no man do to another that which would be repugnant to himself (The Mahabharata). What seems to be presumed in these sayings is that individu- als are capable of reasoning and placing themselves in the shoes of those they are most likely to hurt by their actions; they are capable of judging if their intended actions have the potential to cause pain that even they would not endure, and that they take responsibility for their own actions (Wiredu, 1992). It is Singer’s (1997: p. 201) contention that ethics is everywhere in our daily lives. It lies behind many of our choices, whether personal or political, or bridging the division between the two. These views resonate with Wiredu’s (1992: p. 193) position that morality is not only universal, but essential to all human cultures. For Wiredu, morality is observance of rules for the harmonious adjustment of the interests of the individual to those of others in society. He contends that the imperative for morality should be: “in all inter-personal situations put yourself in the skin of the other and see if you can contemplate the con- sequences of your proposed action with equanimity”. I fully support this view. Ubuntu/Botho’s Response to Incidents of Moral Indiscretion The question, how should ubuntu/botho respond to premedi- tated murder, muti killings, burning of the elderly people on suspicion of witchcraft, homophobic killings, and other such moral indiscretions, places ubuntu/botho morality on the spot- light. The issues raised by the above question are pertinent to ubuntu/botho given that ubuntu/botho is a normative concept. Just to recap on how the normative aspects of ubuntu/botho have been theorized, Broodryk (2002: p. 13) describes it as “a comprehensive ancient African worldview based on the values of intense humanness, caring, sharing, respect, compassion and associated values”. Ramose (2006: p. 366) contends that ub- untu/botho represents the epistemological paradigm that in- forms the cultural practices, including the law, of the Bantu- speaking peoples. In another publication Ramose (2002) locates ubuntu/botho within the realm of the African existential world and African conceptions of knowledge. He describes ub- untu/botho as the wellspring flowing with African ontology and epistemology. Botho features prominently in debates on Seso- tho literary works where it is regarded as “the full expression of one’s humanity” (Shanafelt, 1988: p. 51). Viewed from within traditional African thought ubuntu/ botho can be said to articulate our communal inter-connected- ness, our common humanity, our interdependence and our common membership to a community. Most importantly, ub- untu/botho raises very strong normative issues. As Metz (2007: p. 323) observes, ubuntu/botho grounds a normative ethical theory of right action, analytically setting aside ubuntu/botho as a comprehensive worldview or a description of a way of life as a whole. In another publication Metz and Gaie (2010: p. 285) contend that this grounding is premised on the assumption that in African moral theory, actions are right roughly insofar as they are a matter of living harmoniously with others or honor- ing communal relationships. Masolo (2010: p. 249) echoes similar sentiments in his observation that the sense of belonging, or the realization and acceptance that the self is located in the midst of others, becomes the basis of his or her moral outlook within the context of a common set of values. Within this mode of thought, no person is considered to be a self-sufficient entity in and for him or herself. Rather, the existence of others is an essential part of the very structure of the self, from which ema- nates the communitarian exigency. For Masolo, the community is thus crucially differentiated from the “masses”. It is not just a collectivity. Rather, it is built through deeds in which are in- scribed a person’s contribution to the building of the commu- nity. It can be inferred from the above analysis that ubuntu/botho morality would eschew the type of moral indiscretions that are the subject of this article. In sub-Saharan African moral thought the expression: “Motho ke motho ka batho babang” (Sotho languages) or “Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu” (Nguni lan- guages), indicates some descriptive claims about the depend- ence of a human being, particularly a child, on other human beings for her survival or for the course her life takes (Metz & Gaie, 2010: p. 275). For Louw (2006: p. 161), umuntu ngu- muntu ngabantu articulates a basic respect for compassion. Thus umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu is both a factual description and a rule of conduct or social ethic. It not only describes hu- man beings as “being-with-others”, but it also prescribes how human beings should relate to others: that is, what being- with-others should be all about. French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre cogently articulates the notion of being-with-others in his book Being and Nothingness. Sartre (2003: p. 434) argues that we discover ourselves not in conflict with the other but in community with him. For Sartre (2003: p. 435), the “we” in- cludes a plurality of subjectives which recognize one another as subjectivities. The “we” is a certain particular experience which is produced in special cases on the foundation of being-for- others in general. The being-for-others precedes and founds the being-with-others (Sartre, 2003: p. 436). Louw (2006: p. 167) echoes similar sentiment to Sartre’s above in his observation that ubuntu dictates that if we are to be human, we need to rec- ognize the genuine otherness of our fellow citizens; acknowl- edge the diversity of languages, histories, values, and customs, all of which constitute the South African society. Indeed for Louw (2006: p. 169), respecting the historicity of the other means respecting his/her dynamic nature or process nature. An “ubuntu perception of the other is never fixed or rigidly closed, but adjustable and open-ended. It allows the other to be, to be- come”. Adding to the above voices Nussbaum (2003: p. 21) con- tends that ubuntu/botho is the capacity in African culture to express compassion, reciprocity, dignity, harmony, and human- ity. She argues that ubuntu sees community rather than self- determination as the essential aspect of personhood. People are distinctive beings, able to recognize and acknowledge each Copyright © 2013 SciRes. 339
M. LETSEKA other through mutual encounters and cultural integration (Nuss- baum, 2003: p. 22). Thus through ubuntu/botho, “our deepest moral obligation is to become more fully human” (Shutte, 2001). My own view is that it would be uncharacteristic for an individual who is sufficiently immersed in ubuntu/botho to contemplate rape or murder because anyone who rapes or mur- ders becomes, as it were, depersonalized. Elsewhere I have argued that it would be illogical for anyone with ubuntu/botho to demonstrate concern for others and at the same time have the inclination to rape, because rape is an affront to, and is incon- sistent with ubuntu/botho moral norms and values (Letseka, 2000: p. 186). The reason for this is that ubuntu/botho is a nor- mative concept that prescribes desirable and accepted forms of human conduct in a particular community of people. We are batho or abantu (persons) because we live lives that are consis- tent with communally accepted and desirable ethical standards (Letseka, 2000: p. 186). While ubuntu/botho ethic entails some elements of the “golden rule”, it extends beyond just requiring one to treat others as one would like to be treated in that it en- compasses a multiplicity of normative values such as caring, sharing, respect for others, compassion, altruism, kindness, generosity, benevolence, and courtesy. In the next section I tease out conceptions of personhood with a view to showing how personhood plays itself out with respect to morality. Conceptions of Personhood The notion of ubuntu/botho, understood as personhood and morality is at the heart of my argument in this article. It is my view that personhood is linked to humane conduct, and that humane conduct is synonymous with good moral conduct. Concomitantly, good moral conduct implies treating others at all times with fairness, dignity and justice. Good moral conduct is predicated on individuals reasoning about their intended ac- tions and making rational choices to act in a particular way, and to avoid acting in other ways that might be deemed to be an affront to good moral conduct. This view of morality is attrib- uted to German philosopher Immanuel Kant, who maintained that morality is encapsulated in a rule which he called the cate- gorical imperative. Kant argued that the categorical imperative is a command or duty to act according to an objective principle of reason. Such a command requires that we should act in such a way that we can also will that our maxim should become a universal law (Kant, 2005: p. 22). For Kant (2005: p. 29), “to justify the categorical imperative we have to show that a fully rational agent would necessarily act in a certain way”. Bandura (1999: p. 193) cautions though that the regulation of humane conduct involves much more than moral reasoning. He argues that a complete theory of moral agency must link moral knowledge and reasoning to moral action. Bandura draws on social cognitive theory to argue that moral reasoning is trans- lated into actions through self-regulatory mechanisms rooted in moral standards and self-sanctions by which moral agency is exercised. This way a proactive form of morality is expressed in the power to behave humanely (Bandura, 1999: p. 194). In a humane society, all human beings have a right to pursue hap- piness. In turn, that right goes beyond one’s right to the duty to respect this same right in others, not to hinder it, perhaps even to promote it. By implication then, in a humane society, there has to be respect for variety and difference. What is Masolo’s (2010, 2004) view on personhood? Masolo (2010: p. 13) uses the concept of juok, in the Luo language of Eastern Africa to delineate the notion of personhood. He writes that in the social and moral senses, juok means an anti-social attitude and character. Behavior is branded as juok if it is inten- tionally aimed at harming others or if it is intentionally weird and out of line with expectations of reasonableness toward other people and/or things (Masolo, 2010: p. 199). Thus the concept (of juok) draws attention to the imagination and prac- tice of right conduct. It is the moral guiding principle in the interactive inter-subjectivity of everyday life. Rooted in a com- munalistic ethic, the concept of juok underlines a strategy for containing socially destructive conduct by reminding people of the deviant and stigmatizing nature of antisocial behavior. In its denotation of character, juok is a descriptive term used to order the everyday reality of social and moral behavior of individuals and groups (Masolo, 2010: p. 185). For Masolo (2010: p. 139) then, because personhood is socially generated, interaction or inter-subjective penetration, not aggregation, is the formative foundation of human nature and the conduit through which humans develop their sense and basis of moral and cognitive values. He elaborates: “By means of communicative interaction we become more than just human beings: we become persons” (Masolo, 2010: p. 142). This view of personhood resonates with the view advocated by Menkiti (1984: p. 171). The latter advocates a conception of personhood found in African tradi- tional thought which defines a person by reference to the envi- roning community. He writes: “morality demands a point of view best described as one of beingness-with-others” (Menkiti, 2004: p. 324). In this regard community plays a vital role both as catalyst and as prescriber of norms in the stated journey of the individual towards personhood. Masolo’s (2004: p. 27) view on morality therefore is that “because morality is a relational category, the moral potentiali- ties we bear enable us to imaginatively project ourselves into the situation of others, making it possible for us to make judg- ments about others’ cases as if they were our own”. He notes that “conflicts between communal demands and individual choices clearly raise issues of the location of moral reason that guides the idea of the moral good” (Masolo, 2003: p. 31). Is the individual then as autonomous as some schools of liberalism demand? Masolo (2010: p. 222) is explicit in chapter 6 of his book The Self and Community in a Changing World that com- munitarianism “is the antithesis of individualism, but its mani- festations in intellectual traditions around the world reveal im- portant regional modifications”. One might ask then: should the community be the sole source of moral reason? Citing contem- porary Western communitarians such as Alasdair MacIntyre, Michael Sandel, Michael Walzer and Charles Taylor, Masolo (2010: p. 226) notes that “while not denying the autonomy of the individual, they emphasize the significance of her participa- tion in as well as dependence on the community for her sense of self, for her freedom, and for her moral development and agency. According to this view, individuals are constituted by the institutions and practices of which they are part and their rights and obligations derive from those same institutions”. For Masolo (2010: p. 241), knowledge of communitarian values is passed on to individuals at crucial points in their growth and development from childhood to adulthood. This is done both systematically through well-defined procedures and randomly in the course of everyday life where people learn from the ex- amples of others, from various modes of speech. Thus in Afri- can modes of thought, the concept of personhood is closely related to the defining capacities of humans. In this sense, being Copyright © 2013 SciRes. 340
M. LETSEKA a person is attained through an educational process that intensi- fies at every stage in a person’s growth and development (Masolo, 2010: p. 241). The key issue I am grappling with in this article is how one ought to behave in order to live a life that is shaped by ub- untu/botho morality? In a sense, what sort of personhood is required to enable one to live a life that is imbued with ub- untu/botho morality? For Masolo (2010: p. 174), “a social con- structivist theory of personhood claims that ideas about the nature of persons are formed in the course of society’s value choices and practices that cohere with their other views and interpretations of the general nature of the universe”. According to this logic personhood is constituted by the theories, practices, and institutions that a society may deem meaningful to its pecu- liar experiences. The issue at stake here is whether the location of morality should be at community level or at the level of the individual? The work of Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor is very instructive. Taylor (1991: p. 161) argues that often the choice is not simply between a close, family-like community and a modern, impersonal society. Instead it is possible for someone to have communitarian or holist ontology and to value liberalism’s individual rights (Abbey & Taylor, 1996: p. 3). For Wiredu (1996: p. 72), the distinction between communalism and individualism is one of degree only. A considerable value may be attached to communality in individualistic societies, just as individuality is not necessarily trivialized within com- munalism. The two orientations can co-exist in different sectors of the same society. I now turn to Basotho indigenous educa- tion. Educating for Ubuntu/Botho through Basotho Indigenous Education The notion of African traditional education or “indigenous education” has been well documented (Kingsley, 2010; Marah, 2006; Mapesela, 2004; Maharasoa & Maharasoa, 2004; Ntsi- hlele, 2003; Adeyemi & Adeyinka, 2003, 2002; Matšela, 1990, 1979). In this section I briefly explore the notion of Basotho “indigenous education” as delineated by Matšela (1990, 1979). As I mentioned in the introduction I have chosen Basotho in- digenous education because it is my own native knowledge, and one with which I am not only familiar, but one about which I can also expound uninhibitedly. I am persuaded that useful lessons can be drawn from the way Basotho “indigenous educa- tion” was used to create citizens with the kind of personhood that was deemed necessary for “good” human conduct among Basotho communities. Again as I indicated in the introduction I take education to be more than just schooling, but to refer to a process of transmitting the culture of society from one genera- tion to the other (Adeyinka, 1993). Adeyinka (2000: pp. 19-20) defines education as the process of transmitting the culture of a society from one generation to the other, the process by which the adult members of a society bring up the young ones. What I attempt to do in this section is to reflect on education and mo- rality in Africa (Adeyinka & Ndwapi, 2002). Adeyemi and Adeyinka (2002: p. 223) note that before the arrival of the mis- sionaries and the introduction of Western civilization into Af- rica “education on the continent was purely indigenous”, that is, it was “generally known as African traditional education or “indigenous education” of various communities” (Adeyemi & Adeyinka, 2003: p. 425). Indigenous education in Africa was intimately integrated with the social, cultural, artistic, religious, and recreational life of the ethnic group (Marah, 2006: p. 15). Masolo (2010: p. 251) endorses this view. In what he terms “social education” he ar- gues that in most traditional African societies individuals were taught about the structure of their social environment and their place in that structure. This knowledge unveiled to them not only how they related to the whole but also how they were ex- pected to behave toward everyone within it, social expectations that were determined by how the initiate was related to each member. Thus the education that the African youth received fitted the group and the expected social roles in society were learned by adulthood. The “African youth’s ethnic group and community were held by rules and regulations, values and so- cial sanctions, approval, rewards and punishments, etc., into which he was inducted” (Marah, 2006: p. 17). It might be ar- gued that African indigenous education promoted gendered roles in society. Traditional Africanists might not deny that in traditional African societies and their cultures there were spe- cific roles for males and specific roles for females. Can we pass judgment on how these societies were ordered? What yardstick would we be using? How fair will such a yard- stick be? Will it enable us to understand such societies within their historical and cultural context or as gender relations are perceived in our times? Nzegwu (1998: p. 602) sensitizes us to the importance of historicity. She argues that historicizing in- terpretations involves “using appropriate yardsticks so that the time frames are not illicitly collapsed and conceptual frames of cultures are not illicitly switched”. However, I should mention that as a modern cosmopolitan male I would be appalled by the gendering of roles that privileges one gender over the other. As Masolo (2010: pp. 52-53) points out, if our cultures teach us from childhood that males are more valuable than females, we are likely to grow up believing that such a statement of gender inequality is a true description of the social order, and if we are male, it may lead us to believe that we are justified in treating women as unequals in the family and in the workplace. Masolo (2010: p. 251) is unequivocal that a person is morally good when he strictly observes the rules that separate gendered spaces in society and where such separation is made out of respect rather than to discriminate. Reminiscing about his ex- periences of gender relations in his hometown of Mombasa, Kenya, Masolo (2010: p. 132) recalls that in the good but long- gone old days, everyone knew that at the taxi stop mothers, people of the female gender, children, and the elderly boarded and alighted first and that no one pushed anyone else. These mores were so well known that no one needed to be reminded of them. Masolo informs us that in Swahili this is known as ustaarabu—social civility. I am persuaded that Basotho indigenous education also strove for the kind of social civility to which Masolo refers above. But I want to take the argument even further by sug- gesting that it was also functional and participatory. Young people learned through initiation ceremonies, work, play, oral literature, ditśomo-Sotho folk tales or legends, and dilotho- riddles (Futhwa, 2011). I will say more on ditśomo in a short while. For now I want to briefly commend on the non-formal nature of Basotho indigenous education. Matšela (1979: p. 188) notes that non-formal education comprises a variety of forms of training and education taking place anywhere and anytime, other than in initiation academies, and specialized professional training. He argues that the education of a Mosotho child en- tailed cultural values, philosophy, personal and family respon- Copyright © 2013 SciRes. 341
M. LETSEKA sibilities and duties to the clan and the people (Matšela, 1979: p. 159), or what Masolo (2010: p. 173) calls “a mix of education and trial-and-error experiences”. He contends that moral educa- tion and the acquisition of the values that sustain the social order are part of initiation rituals in most African societies. These rituals, which are an important aspect of the rites of pas- sage, “create” a person out of the untamed and unmolded body of a child (Masolo, 2010: p. 242). My own initiation into family responsibilities began as a herd boy tasked to look after my father’s cattle. Herding was a re- sponsibility every Mosotho boy was expected to carry out with distinction. A herd boy who excelled in his tasks and responsi- bilities was known as a Motjodi—the Euplectes progne, or a long-tailed widowbird, implying one who leads. Mapesela (2004: p. 322) argues that Basotho indigenous education incul- cated good ethics, morals and values such as humaneness (ub- untu), neighborliness, responsibility, and respect for self and others. It is his view that Basotho indigenous education “can still be used to encourage people to become better members of society, as well as to help curb certain social problems ... a lack of neighborliness (leading to heartlessness, theft, killing and rape), a lack of ubuntu (resulting in an uncaring and unpatriotic society); as well as a lack of good ethics (leading to an irre- sponsible, lazy and poor society)”. In a way, Basotho indige- nous education could be a useful response to Pastor Ray Mc- Cauley’s concerns above on the need to socialize boys to be better men, and I should add, girls to be better women. Thus indigenous education is a process of cultural transmission and renewal whereby the adult members of society carefully guide the development of infants and young children, initiating them into the culture of society (Adeyemi & Adeyinka, 2002: p. 224). African indigenous education was also communal. Adeyinka and Ndwapi (2002: p. 18) argue that given that most communi- ties in pre-colonial Africa were agrarian, all citizens would engage in the clearing of individual member’s farm-bush, and would work together during planting and harvesting season. Elsewhere I have remarked on the letsema-cooperative com- munity farming among the Basotho where I note that “four or more families would come together and agree on a duty roster that would allow them to cultivate each of their fields on agreed days to make them ready for the planting season” (Letseka, 2000: p. 183). But letsema was not just a cooperative commu- nity effort. On the contrary, through letsema members of the community recognized that it would be difficult and slow for individual families to complete the cultivation of their fields on time if each family was to go it alone (Letseka, 2000: p. 184). As Adeyinka and Ndwapi (2002: p. 18) point out, part of the purpose of African traditional education was the development in children of a communal spirit, by which each individual saw himself/herself as part of a bigger unit, working and living to- gether for the common good. It can therefore be reasonably inferred that African traditional education inculcated in young people feelings of belonging and interdependence between all the members of the community, or what Masolo (2010: p. 240) calls “a life of cohesion, or positive integration with others”. Let me now briefly commend on two key aspects of Basotho “indigenous education” that I regard as essential to the devel- opment of personhood. These are lebollo and ditśomo. First, lebollo or initiation school. Matšela (1990: pp. 53-56) contends that lebollo aimed to equip youngsters with competencies that are necessary for adulthood. These included bohloeki (purity), which is advocacy for cleanliness both in its literal form as it relates to hygienic living, and in its metaphorical form as it relates to mind and soul or inner self. Lebollo sought to instill competencies such as thuto-kelello (cognitive engagement). that is, the ability to think strategically and at the highest level. The initiates were initiated3 in a problem-based education. They were presented with problems pertaining to real life situations in society and challenged to develop long-term solutions. They were instructed on makhabane (virtues), which included indus- try or hard work, respect for persons, humility, perseverance, service to the nation, patriotism, leruo (wealth), makunutu a sechaba (national secrets or classified information), bonatla (warriorship), and boqapi le bokheleke (creativity and eloqu- ence). With respect to leruo [wealth] Maharasoa and Mahara- soa (2004: p. 111) observe that the Sesotho proverb: “mphe- mphe e ea lapisa, motho o khonoa ke sa hae” (begging begets poverty; an individual is better served by the sweat of his or her brow) was used to fuel the spirit of self-reliance and to dis- courage economic inertia. It thereforen seems reasonable to argue that among other things, the lebollo sought to instill those virtues that are regarded as worthwhile and sustainable in tradi- tional African thought. Second, ditśomo-folk tales that are orally passed down from one generation to the next and become part of the community’s tradition. Coplan (1993: p. 92) observes that like auriterary metaphors, ditśomo are intended to startle untamed meanings from their burrows. They are full of surprises and attacks rang- ing from the uncanny to the fantastical, with mythical creatures, wild animals, and even wilder humans pursuing improbable stratagems. But at the heart of ditśomo are home truths about the nature of humanity and society, which is why ditśomo are so central to Basotho social philosophy. One of the most popu- lar tśomo among the Basotho is the tale of Khodumodumo and moshanyana’ Sankatana. Khodumodumo is a monster that em- bodies the white South African state, which envelops the black multitudes into bondage. Sankatana represents the young lib- erator. Khodumodumo appears and consumes the entire Basotho nation in its wake except one pregnant woman who escapes by camouflaging herself by smearing her body with ashes and cow dung instead of ochre. Khodumodumo mistakes her for a soil- encrusted stone and spares her. As it departs Khodumodumo gets stuck at the mountain pass and cannot cross to the other side. Meanwhile the woman gives birth to a boy who miracu- lously grows into a young man, fully accoutered with a blanket, a spear and shield, and who identifies himself as Sankatana (the ragged-one) (Coplan, 1992). Sankatana battles the monster with his spear, kills it and frees the captives. Coplan (1992: p. 93) argues that the story of Khodumodumo (culture villain) and Sankatana (culture hero) plays around with a series of cultur- ally sentient metaphoric tropes, bringing them into metonymic relationship and creating a dialogue between social ideology and practice. Centrally, it is the tale of a hero who defeats the villain and frees the people from political and cultural bondage. By way of closing let me hasten to mention that while I sup- port the principles of Basotho indigenous education as ex- pounded above, especially its emphasis on grounding the know- ledge of young people in community values, I also recognize the importance of exposing the young people to the wider world 3The notion of “Education as initiation” was given prominence by Brit- ish philosopher of education Richard Stanley Peters in his inaugural lecture delivered at the Institute of Education, University of London, 9 December 1963. Copyright © 2013 SciRes. 342
M. LETSEKA and to different cultures, or what is commonly known as cos- mopolitanism (Gitlin, 2006; Nussbaum, 2002). I cognizant that nations are not natural, organic, objective, or anything of that sort but are the inventions—“constructions”—of intellectuals and the stories that they tell about history and culture (Gitlin, 2006: pp. 130-131). As Nussbaum (2002: p. 9) cogently puts it, to be a citizen of the world one does not need to give up local identifications, which can frequently be a source of great rich- ness in life. Instead, we should think of ourselves not as devoid of local affiliation. Nussbaum (2002: p. 8) makes a case for education for world citizenship on three grounds. First, the study of humanity as it is realized in the whole world is valu- able for self-knowledge: we see ourselves more clearly when we see our ways in relation to those of other reasonable people. Second, only by making our fundamental allegiance to the world community of justice and reason can we avoid the dan- gers of local allegiances and partisan loyalties. And third, cos- mopolitan politics recognizes in people what is especially fun- damental about them, most worthy of respect and acknowl- edgment: their aspirations to justice and goodness and their capacities for reasoning in this connection. If educating for ubuntu/botho was to focus only on local, African or indigenes, and preclude exposure to what the rest of the world has to offer, I would regard such an education as simplistic, parochial, anti- educational and not wo rthwhile pursuing. Conclusion What I have attempted to do in this article is to highlight in- cidents of moral indiscretion and to warn against their implica- tions for our taken-for-granted notions of good moral conduct. I described such incidents as shocking and horrifying to morally discerning individuals. I sketched the underlying assumptions of Basotho “indigenous education” with a view to reflecting on lessons that can be learnt from such an education in order to “create citizens” that are immersed in ubuntu/botho, understood as personhood, humaneness and morality. My view is that in- voking the notion of Basotho indigenous education is neither nostalgic yearning for the long gone past, nor the movement to retreat to the “caves” and “bushes”. Instead it is recognition that some of the values and ideas of indigenous African systems can add value to the way contemporary African cultures and poli- tics are ordered. If we agree that ubuntu/botho is a cohesive moral value that grounds a normative ethical theory of right action as Teffo (1994) and Metz (2007) argue, then it follows logically that ubuntu/botho would eschew rape, assault, domes- tic abuse, murder, muti killings or homophobic killings because these would be incompatible with ubuntu/botho morality. 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