297 81 10MB
English Pages [88] Year 1976
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SCHOOLOF THEOLOGY
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AMTA
CLAREMONT
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DOCUME NT
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DOCUMENT
IDAC a
1.
BETWEEN
Zee LIFE 3.
ENTHUSIASM
IN THE
EDUCATION
AND
APREHENSION
PLURAL
TODAY
5
N h owe
9
le ieoi
17
Two
3.2.
Why literacy
aby
systems
contradictory
3.1.
avd
22
on. 4
oe
OF A SOCIETY
4A, OUTLINE
PAIGC:
4.1.
The
4,2.
Improving
Cultural everyday
fact
and
cultural
30
factor
ie
life
Ft
5. REINVENTING EDUCATION LE eee Se PT 6,
DITERACY:
INSTRUMENT
AND
REQUIREMENT
NOTES
Pie
47
CHANGE
tay
28 55
van
CREDITS
PART
OF
2
cartoon-strip:
SOME
QUESTIONS
ON EDUCATION
IN GUINEA-BISSAU
.
55
}
|9q .GWS GBS Lal
ib favo (steal_
Cah Be Mint
e
pe
wm (vintg_- Bye, af compadey ee
Cee
ye?
NT
yer ew be
NSee y e
e
pea ee
a
a
ee
" One verty,
of
the
its
most
striking
destitution.
A
characteristic seemingly
bad.
of
our
country
situation,
in
is
its
reality
po-
good.
f
For
poverty
blank is
the
sheet, most
pushes
one
everything new
or
the
to
change,
is most
to
possible; beautiful.
action,
to
one
write
i
can
revolution. and
draw
Ona all
that
BETWEEN ENTHUSIASM AND APREHENSION
During the spring of 1975, the IDAC office in Geneva received a letter from Mario Cabral, Minister of Education for the Re-
public
of
Guinea-Bissau.
The
letter invited Paulo Freire and the IDAC team to visit Guinea and participate in the development of the national adult literacy program.
Caught between enthusiasm and apprehension, we said yes. First of all, there was the enthusiasm of being confronted with GuineaBissau, a nation quite unlike
others World.
of Africa
or
the
Third
Guinea-Bissau. In spite of the haughty and contemptuous silence
in which
the
metropolitan
countries wrap everything that takes place outside their boundaries, we already knew a bit:
800,000
inhabitants
in
an
1
area
smaller than Switzerland, a sort of enclave on the African West Coast between Senegal and GuineaConakry, a peasant people who spent fifteen years struggling in a war of national liberation. Forty-eight years of Portuguese fascism had made forgotten lands not only of "metropolitan" Portugal, but also of its "overseas
territories".
For
many
in
the
Western World these "Portuguese colonies" only appeared on the pages of history on April 25, 1974. While hearing about the overthrow of fascism in Portugal by a movement of young army officers, a poorly informed public opinion also learned that very soon Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, and perhaps even Angola, would be "liberated" and granted their independence. Actually,.not very Many people were aware that
5
contrary
to
appearances,
it
really the long struggle African people which had about Among
was
of the brought
the liberation of Portugal. those people in struggle,
the Guineans were the most successful in bringing the Portuguese army to its knees. Over long years they fought to demonstrate in practice the absurdity of the colonial war and the backwardness of the fascist regime. The everyday heroism of the Guinean people was at the root of the
young
political
too
get
out
finally getting Behind stood
(African
dence
plants, the Guinean peasants fought, produced, and educated themselves, creating, even during their struggle, institutions
which
pointed
to
a new
society.
for
the
tions.
people
Party
stores"
PAIGC,
of :a .lost
process
In order
war,
they
understood the need rid of fascism. this
"people's
the
slow
awareness.
a Party,
and
from springing up all over the countryside in the liberated areas. While the Portuguese tried to kill and destroy everything, people, animals, and
And we also knew that even the brutal murder of Amilcar Cabral by agents of Portuguese colonialism in January of 1973, failed to stop the progress of the liberation struggle which culminated in the September 1973 declaration of independence of the State of Guinea-Bissau, almost immediately recognized by more than 80 na-
officers'
of
stations,
of Guinea
of
in struggle Indepen-
and Cape Verde).
Behind the party, which was at the beginning only a small hand-
We
ful of people, stands Amilcar Cabral. We shall come back to this people, this party, this
of course, but they were like echoes from far away, hardly heard in the noise of solemn de-
man, which all melted into one so as to give birth to a new rea-
lity:
Guinea-Bissau,
and independent
(1).
liberated
were
bates
aware
of our
a party,
learned to bardments,
and
a man
who
confront napalm bomforced uprooting of
the civilian population, torture, terror, and indiscriminate agression against the people. The storm of blind and hopeless violence proved unable to prevent
6@]|Open-air
schools,
mobile
medical
all
world.
And
sudden
awareness
when
march
it
and
the
of
our with
Guinean
facts,
of the
our Western of the
is perhaps
confronted
of
these
societies
Northern Hemisphere, Civilization, center
information A people,
of
our
the lack
of
"smallness" the
long
people,
that
tempered our enthusiasm with apprehension. What could we actually bring to these people
who had performed so many incredible feats ? Could we possibly meet their expectations ? ©
We, at IDAC, had always criticized the arrogance of the interwith
armed
who,
expert
|national
his or her know-how and techniques, is ready to "help Others". And then our apprehenSion betrayed us. We felt insecure in so far as we had no answers or ready-made solutions But, on the other hand, why should we have answers to ques-
we
that
tions
did
not
yet
know?
SO we decidéd to tell the Guinean Government, in all honesty, how happy we were to receive
Mery
invitation
,-but that,
given
our lack of information about their reality, we should prefer not to intervene immediately in
the
field.
We
therefore
asked
them about the possibility of a fist visit tor acquainting ourselves with Guinea-Bissau, its people and its leaders. At the
end
of
this
exchange
and
first
ideas
then,
visit
and
we
could
observations
together
with
them,
work out a long-term program of collaboration in the light of their needs and our abilities.
The Guineans accepted this approach, understanding that we had no intention of arriving with miracle solutions, but that neither would we come as empty-
handed
tourists
glimpse
We
would
an
greedy
exotic
bring
to
reality.
with
us
to
Guinea-
Bissau
learned
lessons
and
which
we
experiences
had
which
we had accumulated in other socio-historical contexts,
Strengthened by our feeling of political solidarity with them, and this was translated sincere desire to offer tools to the service of who lived and worked in Bissau.
into our our those Guinea-
4 a
:
a
ae &,aes ee
Ms ”ees
eine ha
.
ee
se
: hate iene erpoMnT a? 7Lee |
“
Al
See
be
ame
ey
, eA +43 5
‘i
So we left the Western way or Geneva Airport,
World by a perfect
jimage of Switzerland - small, clean, functional, discreetly tasteful after the fashion of the
Veuyetich sNothing here challen-— jges the imagination, everything is in its place, well signposted, PtChereyis' no danger of.¢rror, no chance of getting lost. Through its doors and hallways pass the world's
most
impressive
fortunes,
and their passage must be smooth. Everything must take place in comfort and order,
|granted Jorder
taken
for
as though comfort and
were
in
the
essential
nature
the West displays itself not
|in the unbridled and lunatic {luxury of America, but rather in jits Swiss attire, well-behaved, |careful, and successful. So from
here we left the Western World, |taking with us not just images: a
|
nn pears
het (aketens’ 7), nae 1
ee
Can Sees ee
hidden behind eee glass,
well-dressed
chairs
which fit
p
seem always to be tir perftectiona®
by a profound Bente eS ntae
cease, for ee Laz
- and conte practically a pote ru tpe ls)
he
| fo ec gee y ee ate
and the ee sere :
=
|Here
j
ry
th
Le
already lost and gone forever. Those are the sentiments which every
City-dweller
less
intimately.
also
knew
bably
them.
this
knows
more
Obviously, And
feeling
it
of
was
Cabral
basis or
we pro-
partici-
fustion,
it was
perhaps
all
which made us apprehensive we asked ourselves what we offer to Guinea-Bissau.
this when could
characterizes
"advanced"
in-
dustrialized society. Yet, in this small country the simple and the complex seem to intermingle. The lives of 90 %-of the population revolve around a piece of fertile land where the Main crop is rice. Agriculture is not just the foundation of Guinean economy, it is the entire Guinean economy. Cabral had alWays said: Without agriculture, no
food,
no
commerce,
On the face of it, reality would seem simple.
iol
no
language
clothing to tural tools
from
the
the
common
culture
and
ci-
to
religion,
from
diet, from agriculto marriage rules,
division
of
labour
to
the distribution of wealth. Thus, we find the Balante people, for example, who are major rice producers, living without state or
hierarchy
Our first impressions on arriving in Guinea-Bissau a few hours later were impressions of finding ourselves far away, somewhere almost on the other side of the world from the West and all that
upon
vilization, diversity is flagrant in» all “areas? =" rom, skam color to the shapes of houses,
from
pating, not in a triumphant civiLization bute in a cristae civile~ zation, jammed in a one-way street, gnawed by doubts and con-
said,
of African
in
a horizontal
and
ega
litarian society where each family works the land which has always been the village's communal property. Such a society coexists with other ethnic organizations such as that of the Fulas with a well-defined hierarchy, based on the authority of the chiefs who live off of the work. of the peasants and women. Then there is the religious diversity, where Moslems and Animists coexist with a few Christians. More than twenty "ethnic" languages are to be found, and yet another lingua franca is being developed, Creole, a sort of Africanized Portuguese enriched with contributions from regional languages.
industry.
therefore, to be very
But this population of 800,000 inhabitants is made up of more than twenty different "peoples" Or “ethnic groups.. Again, as
the
It is on the basis of such a complex reality, with all its richness and its shortcomings, that the PAIGC together with the people, is building a nation.
The Guinean people. At contact with them, one
first is struck
Ried ile by the warmth of their. human. aug _|war.
And
yet,
of oppr |lationships. They call each other | tt ose years ABUL }comrade, and, on their lips, the © | fighting is |) word does not sound quaint, like : a kind of Sir or Madame of revo| lutionary language, but more like a living expression of friendship and real solidarity which is surely a heritage from the time of the struggle for liberation. Today the war is over,
|ministers missars
-who are called Com-
of State
installed,
- have been
a government
is in
|place, but people still continue to live "convivially", to use a | word which sets the West dreaming. Calling each other comrade does
not just mean belonging to the same
party.
Above
all
Reestaccs For the ou
it means
nally answered the
that people are long-time | friends,
together
that
they have
fought
and that today they are
violence yee their | in he reeuetneni a
confronting new tasks together. | The leaders are neither experts | nor professionals who stay enclosed in their assigned jobs,
Jueeneireministry,
nizer ane eats
or in-an in-
| know why they do things - which "competent" technocrats and mahave
often
At first sight,
forgotten.
one would never
say that they were
just coming
| out of a long, hard, and eet De
|
in ind
nized h
[Rae
of v
ae 4 ee
stitution. They may not all possess sophisticated technical know-how or super-specializations, they may not always have the answer to every question, but they do have a visceral, daily, and practical knowledge of their country and its people. They nagers
le
SE
pe
the
invader,
the
colonizer.
group
of
puppets,
learned
through their participation the liberation struggle how Sharing a few everyday experiences with today's Guineans, we get the
impression
that,
for
them,
violence was less a psychological phenomenon than a necessary, unavoidable political Portuguese invaders
fact. broke
The up the
order of things and planted destruction. So they had to be confronted and wiped out. Maybe the Portuguese were not even worth the Guinean's hate, only their contempt. The Guineans were humilated, beaten, oppressed for centuries. That is hard to bees, Obviously, ~butsit is not Surprising. That is what the
"Tugas" come
(the
for,
and
Portuguese), the
Guineans
had
return
cover
never deceived by the pretended Portuguese role of ‘bringing civilization and progress. The Opposing camps were well defined: they, the colonizers; we, the colonized. Such a real and present enemy had to be dealt with and defeated by all possible means. That was all. Violence was directly linked to the colo-
people
and
re-
identity
and
digni-
fusion - much
with the of which
in
PAIGC.(
the
rent side
common people took place with-
1t
16°
rather
cure
to hear about fusions in= political parties, but’ the
PAIGC is not the kind of party that we are used to in the West. It has not become an institution
so
abstract
and
hierarchical
that it has practically no more link with its own members. It is not a rigid structure, bureaucratic and intangible. The PAIGC
rather
the
instrument
effect
putting
a common
sciousness:
and
expression
for
guide
will
and
“Strength,
of
the
and
the
into
con-
“Light,
people".
"Our
party, our leaders", say the people, and the leaders speak
"our
people,
our
of
land".
sary for as long as the occupation, lasted, but it did not take root.in the people's spirits.
In this common effort, this life lived in» thes plural, in. this sense of belonging, lies probably the greatest and most original power of the Guinean people. Yesterday, the liberation struggle.
Bad
Today,
nizer's
presence
memories
and
remain,
was
but
neces-
not
bit-
terness.
the In
national
building
from
12
the
ty. We shall come back to this process of the intellectuals
is
were
to
their
in to
of
reconstruction,
a
exploitation
these
common
society
and
free
domination.
tasks,
under-
Even the Guinean intellectuals, the African petite bourgeoisie,
taken by the people and the party, started yesterday, continued to-
those trained schools to be
day, there a constant
in the a well
Portuguese manipulated
is a link, reference,
a a
presence, face
known
by all:
that
Cabral. Many | have a story
of Amilcar
knew him. Almost all of personal experien-
ce to tell about him. He is people's hero and founder of
the
We
In
September,
after
his
1973,
murder,
seven in
a
months
clearing
in the forest at the moment of the declaration of the independent
was
state
of
Amilcar
Guinea-Bissau,
Cabral
who
it
first
spoke. And his people wept when they heard the tape recording of his last speech. At another time, during a particularly difficult moment in the war when the Portuguese had stepped up their terrorist bombings, there was a
party
meeting
suddenly
party the
up
leaders,
brother
today
in which
stood
and
(among
of
a peasant told
of
the
them,
Amilcar,
President
the
who
Luis, is
Republic),
that they must not weaken, that they must continue to fight. At the end of his speech, the young
peasant
added,
"Cabral
alive. It is he because I don't
Seek
Cabral
is
who just know how
still spoke, to
cea.76
does
indeed
live
in
the
memory of his people, and his example is a constant guide to them. The multitude of stories about him make it hard to distinguish between history and le-
gend. counts and
That is
hardly that
continued
the
the
fusion
between
Party
old and new, which Guinea-
everyone.
of
friend
a
nation,
seals
and People, between young and old, from Bissau was born.
matters. life,
existence
What death,
of
Cabral
were
PAIGC
during
also
told
that
headquarters
the
long
at
years
liberation,
Cabral
habit
morning
every
was
in
the
Conakry,
of war in
for
the
before
be-
ginning his work, of visiting the school which was operated there by the party. He would stay for
a while watching play and talking
the children with them. "The
children", he would the flowers and the
our
fight..".
say, “are reason for
Children
represented
the future, and Cabral came there to find strength for continuing the struggle. One might remember here a line from Lenin in which he said, "If man were completely deprived of the possibility of dreaming, if he could not and then outstrip the present and picture in his mind the finished product of his work, Ido not know what motive there could be for such vast and exhausting
efforts.
For
Cabral
jaetne)OVno
GE
the Guinean children meant the anticipation, the dream already being realized, of a better world. "Our struggle," he said, "was
always
made
of
Today,
the
best
impossible
of
Guinea-Bissau is children. During village
who
told
elders,
dreams".
everything
reserved for a meeting of we
us about
met
his
an
old
faith
in
the man
in a
3
future which would also be his in so far as his children or his children's children could benefit
from
the
fruits
Past
and
future,
of
the
old
struggle.
and
new,
be-
longing and the continuity. Today the entire nation, people and leaders, with the party forming the
link
between
them,
and
with
Cabral's example alive in everyOne's memory, are all mobilized for the realization of a common program. That program the Guineans put into a simple formula: To improve the people's daily life. Such a simple and beautiful program
ficult
is,
and
of
course,
full
of
also
dif-
obstacles.
How do you convert the heroism of war-time into the peaceful heroism of fulfilling everyday tasks ? Now that the Portuguese
are gone, not that there is no more visible enemy, how do you keep weariness from setting in How
do
you
keep
from eroding rit ? How do
the you
collective spimaintain the
commitment and passion time of struggle ?
Improving life is a
of
the
the people's daily formula which demands
more
definition.
tion
will
choices
?
individualism
be
which
made
And
that
through
Guineans
defini-
the
are
called upon to make at every ment . We shall come back to question again.
mothis
EDUCATION
TODAY
perspective
Pecountry with 90% adult illeteracy. It goes without saying that
such
within
a context
a mass
tal
of
lite-
racy campaign raises a mountain of questions which are unanswerable ititeracy is not seen in ‘the
TWO When
the
entered
Bissau,
-
the
was
duced
by the
system
we of
felt
understand
Guinea-Bissau's at
to-
Because
immediately
clearly
totality
the
the
the
edutime
3.1
the colonial in ‘centrated
the
intro-
Portuguese
to
nation's
effort.
cational situation Or independence.
during
condomination, the urban centers
controlled and alien, autho-
which they had modelled on an ritarian
school,
caricature
exists
systems:
There
this,
need
nation's capital, in September 1974 and took control of the whole country, they found themselves confronted with the co-existence of two completely contradictory educational
the
SYSTEMS
CONTRADICTORY PAIGC
of
educational
-
of
a
sort
of
as
it
school
in Portugal; —
There was the system, or we should say, the educational
2
process being built from the grass roots in the liberated areas of the country where the school was integrated with pro-
ductive
labour
and
community
life.
To grasp the structural contradictions of the two educational programs, we need to take a look backwards and try to understand
the
genesis,
organization,
jectives of education.
the
two
and
concepts
ob-
scood
as
the
of
in
so-
skills and social values, was already present, of course, as it is inmvany society. By participating in the life of the family group and community, by work in the fields, by hearing the elders Speak, and by taking part in collective
ceremonies,
the
children
and young people acquired, over the years, the knowledge necessary for their integration into their society. They learned the techniques of production and they interiorized the values which were necessary for communal life and
for
the
There
group's
were
Masters
no
and
survival.
established
no
special
where
the
transmission
1ig| ledge
was
to
take
place.
school-
places of
place
in area was
hot "educated" during certain hours of the day which had been set aside for that purpose. One learned from life and experience, and the experience of life was synonymous with working, being with others, reproducing the society.
beyond
domination,
acquiring
take
certain
"traditional" African sothere was no school as we Education,
not
under-
colonial
today.
did
a separated and specialized of human activity. A person
This spontaneous daily education was directly plugged into the social reality. The acquired knowledge, however, was not cumulative, and the opening towards the outside world, the world
called Ciety, it
Education
his” or her work, also an educator.
of
Before
know
the example of each adult was
know-
Through
the
community
group, was some major
from down ce), be
and
the
weak. Except during crises, (threats
the outside or the breakof the environmental balanwhen the society needed to
restructed
vive,
the
Simply
with
conserving social
in
order
learning what
and
to
process
was
sur-
dealt
useful
reproducing
for
the
fabric,
Obviously, when colonialism arrived with its pre-arranged
destiny
of
slavery
and
domestica-
tion for the African man and woman, it was a rupture in the traditional social balance 2). No more learning could take place related to work and life, for work and life had been taken over and appropriated by an out-
Side
enforced
power.
Forced
labour
became
a constraint
imposed on a majority of the colonized population, and the development of a colonial state demanded larger and larger numbers of local cadres for making the colonial administration function and for playing the role of intermediary between whites and "natives". These people had to be trained, educated, helped to The Portuguese were "assimilate". going to offer this small minority — ono, "not a new life in*their colonies, but a borrowed life, a side-lines of the the on life game, a caricature of a life. And so an institution came into being in Africa which was itself a caricature
of
an
external
the side-lines of nizer's school.
life:
model,
the
on
colo-
It was a school with no other goal than teaching the Africans how to be more useful to the Portuguese. The colonial army invaded the land and brutalized the physical body while the colonial school, tamed its functional counterpart, the minds and domesticated the
soul.
For
submission
Portuguese,
therefore,
"educate" meant "de-Africanize". Too bad if that led to creating torn and divided human beings, white skins, black uprooted pedagogy ian ritar masks. An autho
the
colo-
success which was, by definition, individualistic. The content of the
teaching
reality
of
was
the
the
foreign
metropolis,
for
Africa had no history. “Africe began to exist for the colonizers only when they discovered itsoThus "inthe 1970s "inthe high school of Bissau, the wives of Portuguese officers still taught the young Guineans about the adventures of Portuguese navigators who had brought God and civilization to the savage peoples of three continents.
The
Guinean
ponse
of
to
people's
the
full
Portuguese
domestication
was
the
res-
program
libera-
tion movement which gave birth to a new educational reality. From the very outset of the the children were struggle, brought together around a member of the PAIGC in a forest clearing, protected from the sun and the Portuguese bombers by branches of In the liberated areas the trees. of the country a new "school" came into being. Very naturally, just because of the immediate situation,
the
to
nizers, and Africans learned how to imitate the Portuguese as the only criterion for success, a
the
first
lesson
con-
sisted of learning how to identify the noise of Portuguese planes so as to escape their rain of
death.
The
learning
process
tried
to
re-
\9
discover
what
had
been
spontaneity
and
tion,
positive
in the experience of the tional" African society.
"tradiThe
informality
of
struggle
of which
at was
part. So as to win the war and lay the cornerstone of an independent state, the young had to
traditional education was revalorized. So was a return to
learn to move progressively yond the particularities of
learning from the experience of the elders. Above all, learning was done through practice. The
separate ethnic group and the limits of each specific region. Education then, was contributing decisively to the creation of a truly national culture rooted in the positive aspects of the dif-
very fact Shortages brought
tionship One
hand
that there were great of material resources
about
a
between and
munity tasks the resident
necessary
learning
production
rela-
on
and
the com-
on the other. So, schools organized
in by
study was directly the party, linked to productive work and the students fully participated in the management of the school and its material upkeep. Through
these
practical
experiments
of
in-
tegrating education with work and the with political participation, liberation movement sought to develop among the students a new mentality stripped of the negative aspects and prejudices of the traditional society - such as, the inferior position for example, of women in the social structure or the sense of powerlessness against natural phenomena.
Such much
an educational process is more dynamic and open to the
outside
world
than
was
the
tradi-
tional learning process. Education no longer attempted to reproduce a situation of ‘equilibrium or stagnation. Quite to the contrary, it tried to rely upon and stimu20| late the whole process of libera-
ferent,
traditional
beeach
cultuxessuie
was also, however, aiming to incorporate and adapt for the nation's needs, the tools of a universal scientific knowledge.
A new educational system - both the product of the liberation struggle and a stimulus to that struggle - was spreading throughout the country's liberated areas. But, in Aprilsao74 ie could be found co-existing with the old Portuguese system which had been established in the urban centers still controlled by the colonialists.
Such was the contradictory educational situation which the PAIGC found on its hands when the Portuguese left in September 1974. As the Guineans told us, when they found themselves confronted with the completely inadequate colonial school, there was a great temptation to take the radical step of simply closing down the whole colonial educational
system.
But
what
alternative
could
| they offer
?
The very nature of the educational| gank | system in the liberated areas thes! made for a gradual development, : going hand
in hand with the prog-
act E ress of the liberation struggle | had which reality European and | material and counting on human and | = material the of resources liberated by the fight- | been the core
ing. Under these conditions, how
could
such a system suddenly
be
| made to serve a whole nation ? The curriculum,
and
text books,
teachers of the Portuguese | schools were clearly unsuitable in the new reality of indepen-
dence. But how could they be completely poaa usted so as to j)meet the new nation's needs ? Where could one find material and to the texts which corresponded
needs of the new programs
| how could
one
prepare,
? And,
from one
| day to the next, teachers who would replace the foreign professors )
formerly taught. At the ees
| courses
were introduced,a special effort |
being made in the direction cof
concrete political experience | This was for a new consciousness. the through example, for | done, creation of student committees ei responsible for runr a : the school.
o 1974-1075 During the the PAIGC
| operatingt | Portuguese had 1 ssentia. in
All these immediate problems were complicated yet further by the
tyne:
| almost total lack of material re-
sources, by the need for building | menta out of nothing a national Ministry | estab
of Education,
and,
even more
im-
Mi
portantly, by the need to answer the huge new growth of demands So | €or admission to the schools. weight as not to sink under the | of so many problems, the only realistic move - which the go-
| vernment decided to make as an
| emergency action - was to take ~ over the schools which the Portu
in ‘political education
|
,
:
‘on this init. al over-view of the We
an educational
situation at
‘the time of independence permits
| us now to consider more
fully the|
| question of the place of literacy
Vin Guinea-Bissau.
32
eecnce: during the war of liberaa:
genes first attempt | at literacy aa hearteee en
|
jvthespeople were, iiAlitepeates= about 90% of the adult popula-
tion; the Party has taken politi-= cal decision) tos tages ines | problem, which was seen as one
of the principal
left-overs
colonial domination, people themselves
and the
of
- especially
in areas near the urban centers were impatient to acquire the tools of reading, writing, and mathematics.
-
The first months of 1975 saw the | beginning of a systematic lite| racy campaign in the region of | Bissau, both within
| People's Army)
FARP
(the
and in certain
neighborhoods of the capital. The first results of this program
will help us see more tee pare
ee ca =e the obstacles
of
literacy
The
work.
within
work
the
advanced
army
rapidly and well; the attempt among the civilians proved a semifailure. The members of FARP learned quickly and, in the process, Many prepared themselves to literacy in their turn, become, prothe thus ensuring workers,
dynamism
gram's
continual
and
growth. On the other hand, among the progress was the civilians, groups finally some much slower, How even abandoning their efforts. concan we account for such a trast between the two different ? Why success in one situations lock in the other ? dead context,
We feel that the answer to these questions is to be found in an analysis of the special position of the armed forces in Guinea today and the perspective which literacy work takes on in such a
Actually,
context.
made
is
nean
army
most were
part, of involved
They struggle. colonial army,
today's for
up,
Gui-
young peasants who in the liberation
yvorced
themselves
helped
by,
from
the di-
their
they On the contrary, origins. proin ipated partic ually contin being and g, helpin tasks, duction
Precisely
the
village
because
their
of
communities.
the
great
liberation
richness
of
struggle
experience,
they
are
same time, will prepare them for — accomplishing the new tasks of national
whole
The
reconstruction.
of
concept
ty is being
national
redefined
securi-
in Guinea-
Bissau, and that means overcoming the traditional idea of an army
made
up of
tain
number
specialists
in warfare
living apart from the rest of the society. The PAIGC must, of continue training a cercourse,
of
its
to
members
carry out military techniques and strategies, but the core of the idea of national defense is seen during as the ability to mobilize, is any crisis, everyone who capable of carrying arms so that
any
outside
threat
would
be met
This means, by a mass resistance. the army although that simply, not be so need it is large today, in order for the nation to be
protected,
the
fought against but they never
day open and receptive to a process such as learning to read and write. For in such a process they are offered the tools which will let them bring to maturity their past experience and, at the
tor
The demobilization of part of the army, however, will have to be
planned
in such
a way
as
to
en-
sure that the political consciousness achieved during the independence struggle is not lost. The PAIGC counts heavily on this political reservoir - made up of soldiers who will have been demobilized - to give impetus to the process of transforming economic in the and social structures
A Pe
a EEE
ae
cially MSY
:
.
“concrete diana Piece real prob1Alems. Learning a linguistic
- | code, then, goes together with developing a political awareness | and receiving a technical prepa|
ration for accomplishing
im-
| mediate tasks. In contrast
Seecenit, the re-examination
_and theoretical elaboration of all the political and cultural experience which the freedom
fighters accumulated
Sega
mae sf oh _
|
during
Sees Struggle.
ta To assist their political dei velopment and technical at training for new tasks, either | inside the army or, for those
to be demobilized, when they
|
e-enter the rae setting.
to this
integrated
approach to literacy work, the | attempts made in the neighbor| hoods of the city of Bissau had only a perspective of isolated effort,..a sort of end in gtseite Lacking relationship to a larger processin which the group could examine its own situation and explore possibilities for improving daily existence through collective action, literacy was reduced to a formal effort in which each person, for his or her own ends, tried to learn reading and writing. The motivation was individualistic and utilitarian: Let's learn to read and write because that opens the way to a better job, especially in public administration.
However,
since such future com-
pensation as social and economic advancement - by no means certain.
| in Guinea-Bissau
today - could
come only at the end of the
learning process,
learning became
| tiresome, abstract and dry. When _the content of the literacy program is no longer related
| PF aeceys, ome
os
to
eae, to fall intogage mechanical
A {
She tg
he
,
ae - e
eee ten,
|memorizing.
eoter or later
habe &
i"
oe ich ig i hoi
i
one isel| come atact! of evel yday '
exhausted by this effort which
One |seems useless and senseless.
ieeeto be related direct. ing that makes
|e
ends up being no longer interested,| and it is easy to quit the group.
The failureof these
carey ; ws Bie) . ‘ i ‘—-t8 ”
first at-
©
tempts among the civilian popula-
tion of Bissau is therefore highily instructive. It reminds us ~ |that literacy work has meaning only where it is simultaneously a
factor in, and a consequence of, a process of transformation of
them. i
| se eo | Such an analysis leads us, be
ae ae |
the group's daily life and social Meality. If that is the case in
| fore considering the generaliza- abel | tion of literacy work throu el oe.
the urban setting, where from the |beginning a motivation clearly lexists - even if expressed in
| the country, to reflect on certon Paget oy \atain basic eee ef it a} |
|does one imagine a literacy program in a rural setting, among peasants who are still nga
|
| individualistic
terms - how then
marked by an oral oes
As a matter of fact, the systema-_ tic failure of massive literacy |campaigns in other African count-
ries confirms
that if literacy
work is only an isolated effort, an end in itself, the result,
| after a certain period of time, will almost certainly
bea
falling back into illiteracy. If
peasants have no obvious need in | their everyday experience to _|
| fed ie theseand8
read
and write,
forget whatever | learned.
they invariably
they may have
©
| oe
|
cbjectles co
as just-a first step ? And how can the continuation of this process of cultural development be related to redefining the whole educational system,
including
the
role
education
and
the
of
formal
school
Thus, by examining questions literacy we are compelled to
?
of
examine the whole educational program. And looking at education as a whole means re-examining the programs of social development
to which must
26
literacy
contribute.
and
education
|
Can one speak of a well-defined jsocial program or development
jmodel in the setting of Guinea-
/Bissau's present historical sijtuation ? What precisely is jthat historical situation ? It seems to us that the country is j}going through a period of tran}Ssition,
that
it is between
two
stages. When independence was won a period ended in which all energies had been channelled into the political-military meetuggle of driving out the colonizer. A new period has just begun in which the liberation
movement,
jitself
now in power,
facing
a new and
finds
dif-
ferent challenge, that of builas a new society.
|As we already said, getting organized and struggling to throw Jout the colonialists is, finally, }a clear and simple goal, es-
|peciallyif (as was ase the
case with the PAIGC) , this goal it
_is seen as directly related to bettering the everyday life of the OREN Lol The creation of | "people's stores" where bpaaencee
could sell their goods
structures, the peed
schools and medical erage were concrete accomplishment
changed the quality of aise ‘in
i i
the country's liberated areas. | On the other hand, ‘buildi igvas! Slieenn
| society where there is no ex- oels _ploitation of man by man,
| ake
| GossPon aee
hat.
|
social program toWonPedsa |day, we will have to go back |
CS
,
go Ge
eh Re ee
ar cae Bes
Sema
and look at the way educa-
tion ai culture were understood
| during the liberation struggle.
‘Moreover, one must see how the | liberation movement itself was | brought into being by the Guinean
| cultural reality and how, in
tks
turn,
Gee
it transformed
and enriched
that reality.
T AND CULTURAL FACTOR nothing other than
441
the culture
| of the dominated people. Accor| ding to him,
the rural masses,
subjected to political domination| and economic exploitation,
ve
“discovered in their
own
re-
culture
live understood as way of life, fer sans of producing, values, and
oases - the only force capable
| of preserving their identity.
ie pacerne snag persecuted, humi-
ik:
, betrayed by certain
eae
ees
|
€
ger= uneasy the
foreign
in-
vader, forced to seek ingen
the Ee
the ERE
ee the
minds of generations of uic-\ tims of oppression - thanks to the liberation struggle, od ture weathered
every storm to
emerge with all its vigour gniract,."
| then, little eece le
|For the founder of the PAIGC, the people, then, make up the "only real entity which is able to preserve and create culture - to _ make history". Nevertheless, this transition from cultural resistance
| struggle
to new
forms
(political,
of
economic,
military) can only be understood |}if we also take into account the |}role played by the urban Seale
| result of exper
ne
hone of the pioneer some! of these Guineans feel a need to.
| break down the duality and mar-~_ ginalization which they exe
perience. discover
In the attempt to
an identity
re
| again their dignity, esata _again to their
own people. And Anc
in coming back to the peasant
| Masses they become conscious of | resistance and spirit of rebel-
| This native petite bour eoisie, | born with the development of t colonial state, trained in the school
and de-Afri-
| lion. When this search for iden— | tity and new dignity is ex-_
sense
‘the colonialist's
of racial
tended
into concrete acts of
| identifying with the hopes of
Ganized,) tried at first to be| come European at any price. | Through imitation of the whites, they sought approval and acceptance. But acceptance never came. The colonial system was 160) rigid);
|
|
|
the Tniletieeseen teres ey people suffer and they see their —
bourgeoisie.
Portuguese
Hi
wee
superiority too
deep to allow concessions being made to the "assimilated". The result of such rejection was the coming into being of divided men ©
| and women - black skins, white
| masks, no longer Africans yet oe | able to become Europeans.
_the masses sph an
occurs that synthesis
there
of the i
“tellectual and the masses. from eelone
tite pele ose
a
PSE AP
becoming in=
tegrated in their country and
the
sere ae eee bee
_ |
conscious effort of mobilization
|and organization for an all-out ‘| ees aaPennes nae colonizer. 4 Be
-| has ‘the liberation
struggle can
| be seen in and of itself as a
“yeu tur: ashy a cultural fact, my extent that it develops _ ties expresses, as far as possible, | the people's long process of re-
ry sistance against colonial rule.
aa as the liberation movement | continues to grow, as Cabral ex| plains, an interaction between
eu
ee,
_ |
a hi
are and struggle begins to
e eeture,
fhe foundation and
inspiration of the struggle,
ara be influenced py ths
/ liberation movement , who Cae from the abe oe Beat ici Cea Boner thecaret
eter
etc,
|
Thaeentee Ie demands the mobilization and organization of a significant majority of the Boba aLaRe political and
moral unity among all social categories,
the
eradication
of the remains
progressive
the refusal
of social
of
a tribal and feudal mentality, and re-
ligious rules and taboos incompatible with the rational
and national nature of the liberation movement. The dynamics of the struggle also demand the practice of democracy, criticism and self-criticism,
a growing share of responsibility on the part of the population in the management of their life, the spread. of teracy, the Creation of
|
1i-
schools and health services, | the training of qualitifed per-|
sonnel drawn from among the peasants and workers,
other measures a real
forced
and many —
which add up to
march by society
along the road of cultural
progress".
ae other words,
the whole
| by which the traditional
process
society
| is made more dynamic as a result eration
movement
| Cabral to believe that the
leads
. ie atestia y sian a not
| It should be pointed out that the text of Cabral's which we have just not gram the
quoted, written in 1972, is a theoretical thesis, a proto be put into practice. On contrary, it faithfully des-
| cribes
|
an historial experience.
In Guinea-Bissau, the PAIGC and |}the liberation struggle which it initiated
| the great
people.
Still
were
ee
in the process of the Le
| struggle and enriching | culture,
while
rican
also LeraS
| new dimension- the national
1
a
This party which grew out | consciousness.
in the attempt to grasp the
examine in greater detail the values and choices which the liberation movement
leet 5 cagee
| values or beliefs which con-
positive
developed during
elements
tional" African
of "tradi-
society, all the
while attacking its backward or “negative aspects. A critical em-
,
was put on overcoming
| d
| such aspects of the feadit ional Masia society as the marginalization | : |} of women,
lessness
the
feeling
of
power-_
and paralysis when con-—
fronted with natural phenomena,
| the submission to the often
_ apt
oes }
#e
:
Ley
| eee ieee SeplOTeaeicae asule
the struggle. As for values, the | PAIGC tried to re-emphasize the
3 a
cat
| in transforming those en Snaatee ine
of the
main drive of the PAIGC educational program, let us now try to
phasis
AEN
| searchof a new one - succeeded
the great teachers,
educators
OEaaa Abst
identity and the intellectuals in)
| the improvem a ofee:
condi-
| tions; especially ‘tn the rural | areas where most of the people
live. Without, of course,
_| ignoring the country's | certain industries,
need for
a clear prio-
| rity is being given to deve-
| loping agriculture in the country side as the only way of reaching | real progress rather than merely | the sham one reflected in the
distorting mirror of city deve-
ee
s =
ete naeeare stipe eae
h are of interest to the
munity, these are the social istics which can be found in the le area Oe aedome
| lopment.
It is also
clear
that
| this real development can only
| come after a conscious attempt to |
make the best of the resources | which the country does have - specifically a fertile earth | and men and women used to working | it well. The choice) of mama. ose |} centric development favoring | agriculture and relying upon the | | creative initiative and conscious | | participation of the people thus | appears to be the cniy cne | capable of dealing with the lack
of material resources without | causing internal unbalance and inequalities and recreating a situation
of dependence
| outside world.
on the
*
tye
|Having defined these basic social values and fundamental choices
of development, sume
we can now
the analysis
re-
of the role
jeducation -.and especially
lite-
|xacy - can play in achieving these objectives.
Before ever,
speaking of literacy, let
us
examine
the
how-
larger
visaged ? It is not possible to re Janswer with a y e s or ano. |First of all because, as we we have
in Chapter
“tional system which was inhe-
| rited from the Portuguese o
without doubt neeof cont | dictions with the basic goa
|context of the educational sysjtem as a whole. Does GuineaBissau's present educational | System favor or hinder the development of a society such as the liberation movement en-
seen above
in harmony with the basic goals” 12
| of the liberation movement, for. eee grew directly out of it the struggle. But, the educa-
3, there >
continue to exist two educa|tional "systems" which have |completely different goals. One |of these "systems", the one
_ |which was being ay | the liberated areas, is «
heat’ re
aw?
ts
ae. as success in passing examinations) move on to se-
condary education, are immediately seen as privileged. aad
a
Considering themselves to be different from and better than the majority of the po-
te
they expect to be
pulation,
rewarded for their educational | success by getting better jobs.in: the capitals
Bee
ean. a Rees percen-
ge, (10 to’ 15, %) of the’ students
ho begin primary school are able
ES. enter the secondary school. | spite Of ee St
In
aa the
| The results of this process which leads to the selection of a mi| \ nority and the exclusion majority
only
bring
of the about
re-establishment of a CLASS STRUCTURE,
6lite
[neue SE aeerace: on mass a pear Eto ooh tow eea
can
the
the rise of a new
within the country.
For the
wholeof the educational system is designed in terms this small minority which succeeds in reaching “higher levels" in edu-Cation, to the detrimenesotacuinterests of the overwhelming
Majority
“the: vast majority of students
os are eee -reach the
level Chin must return Coal it to
| excluded
which
(5).
is progressively
| At the same time, these schools | in Africa which follow European
| models are isolated institutions | closed
in on themselves
and se-
| parated from community and so| cial life. Above all, they have | absolutely
no contact
with the
| reality of | the peasant world. schools, prac] | tically always located in the towns,
the students do nothing
‘but studs
/> as though
that were
| in itself a specialized field -
ia
| always: EEE
ceeds and more
distance
between
the peasant nothing but
success
for
themselves
and
majority who do work. Individual
the
students
therefore
means getting further and further away from their origins - the village community - and being gradually integrated in a different urban world, that of purely intellectual work.
This school which is separated from the life of the people and from productive activity, also reinforces the idea that learning and knowledge can only be transmitted by those who have had an advanced formal education - the teachers. And this knowledge, acquired only at school, becomes necessarily book-centered and abstract. It is no longer based on lived experience but on second-hand experience. This idea of teaching as the act of handing over a package of knowledge leads, an Africa, to a distrust of the wisdom and experience of the elders who, in turn, begin to consider themselves ignorant and useless.
Finally, to this inventory of errors and mistakes, we can add that the divorce between study
and work which the colonial school represents in a poor
Afri-
can
country
the
best
of
that
elements
of
some
the
nation's
youth are excluded from productive work during the whole of their education. Since they accomplish nothing which is soCially useful, the subsistence of those who study in the schools must be shouldered by the rest of the population, which means
especially
to
And
peasants.
the
compound the injustice, we see that it is the peasant child who is the most disadvantaged by the schools selection mechanism. in so far as the Actually, teaching is abstract, formalized and cut off from practice, the children of the petite bourgeoi-
sie
in
the
(who
cities
have
raaccess to books, newspapers, dio, and cinema), enter the race with a distinct advantage over less in touch country children, with the communications media and with formal cultural events.
In From the moment when formal school education becomes the only acceptable kind, degrees and academic diplomas become the sole passport for better jobs at higher Salaries. Practical experience is pushed into the background and considered less important than the degrees earned or the number of years spent in school.
means
short,
this
educational
tem inherited
from
leads,
to
creation
elite,
nourished
the
on
sys-
colonialism
of
a
new
individualism
and, moreover, quite poorly prepared! froma, technicalsor pres fessional point of view, to respond to the country's real problems and needs. For the agronomists, engineers and doctors who come out of these Western schools
39
7
ep ekeaeae ee >.
f
Ee
A
Oe
“a
wee
-
na “4
eae
o
ak
oe
z ;
i
try like Guinea-Bissau, Jina country
it is absurd that primary
| teaching continues to be a kind |of antechamber on the way to
something that the majority of | students will never reach. If
iste
the country agrees to make a gi| gantic effort to give basic
making the ~ about vateresources. Finally,
| schooling to 80,000 children,
Se ag ioe: education ire
-
aeway ‘prepared | to serve
ae
make up a complete training pro-
ase a eee Ttis
cess. Its objectives cannot be simply to get children ready for
“to s
nt
passing an exam which is necessa-_ | rily selective. It must prepare
seekir ioe by es | which Set lete Phede pacsecn*: re the
| the students
the industri-
eas
2
way
in the best possible
for the type of life
that
| vast majority of them will in the nation's
sGLOn. (TD
}
bui
ing all they need
\
_
lead a happy
communities|
and
to know to useful
social
life within the framework of a society which is agrarian but
pa eee
liberated from all relationships
|ternative, they are forced to
[continue coexisting with that tem for yet a eS a a
|
learn during their basic school-
- into this (Sth
ited |result of [esa the lack of [i a
rural
the
lead
| and villages. Every boy and girl to must have the opportunity
lear understanding of the basic istortions
must
| then the sduceeian received
+
of exploitation and domination. \\To. take 'Nyerere‘s expression, | the purpose Is not to) proyideran inferior education but a different
education, whose object will be _
to develop j}and values {can return contribute
knowledge, skills, with which the student | — to the community and _ to its continual bet|
terment.
nth
ees
re, by extension
j liberated
areas, the schools must
hacenwas Siccacy haces
of
:
in the|
| cease to be closed institutions
|
|
=.
isolated
ment.
0)
lees
Mh ape ieee
oc
/:
from the social environ-
Students and teachers must ©
be able
to participate
in village
community life, taking responsibility for work (including produc tion) and by encouraging, in turn, the community
jlearning
participation
present, always takes place | Side Guinea-Bissau, will have
| to be more closely related to
in the
_
| the rural setting and to pro-
process.
|
ductive labour. The ideal would
) seem to be that during the : whole course of studies , the | students could combine theoreti- | cal learwith niprati ngcal work.|
Even if primary teaching is gradually redefined so that all Guineans will receive basic schooling, there is still a thorny problem to be faced, that of rapidly training the specialized cadres which the jcountry needs (especia inlly agriculture, health, economic planning, etc.) which impliesa spe-
cialized
| Such implanting of the school
in the village community would
| ensure, among other things,
that whatever was learned could
be immediately tested through
application to the concrete
education without pro-
problems of the rural world.
moting the reappearance of a privileged élite. In other words, how }Can basic education, open to all, |}be combined with a longer, more systematic training available only
to a small minority
n study betweehip | This relations
-and work could then contribute not just to training technical
| cadres in skills which are
| really applicable to the count| ry's needs, but also to de~
? And how
| veloping a new spiritof res-
should that minority be choosen, how should the training be structured to make sure that the ‘students are not cut off from the rest of the population and that their knowledge is directly related to the nation's reality and
| ponsibility and service to the
| community among the students.
needs ?
Perhaps the answers to these |}questions can be found by direct
| applicationof one of the PAIGC's | fundamental
who know
principles:
"those
more bear a special
ponsibility for putting that
res-
-|knowledge at the service of the
_ |community". In order that this
=2 ms
Pie
\ Gus
.
|
| ©
£65
‘ee
© icc cuenee
the first
lesson of the school in the
liberated
areas:
re
teaching ceases to be purely theoretical, the urban students' advantage at the start tends to be
reduced. Even more significant, in so far as study is associated with work and community life, children from the peasant milieu will feel much more at ease and therefore can give creative
free rein to capacities.
their
This structural reorientation of the school and education is, of course, not easy to put into practice, and it raises a number of real problems. It cannot be done in a matter of months, nor perhaps, even of years. But, in Guinea-Bissau, in spite of the weight of the colonial heritage
and
the
shortage
of material
re-
sources, it is already in progress. To mention but one example, during our second visit to the country: in February 1976, the
first
attempts
at
linking
study
to labor were being worked out in the hope of breaking the isolation in which the high school students of Bissau lived. It is expected that the results of these first pilot projects will lead to a more generalized system.
|}Having acquired a better understanding of the whole situation of education in Guinea-Bissau today j}and having extracted of the liberation movement's practice the basic values and choices for | building a new society, we should }like,
now,
to end
this
document
|by returning againto the specific question of literacy. /"On a blank fepeees Se ie ae is ‘possible; you can write or draw what is the most new and the most beautiful?)
If this
quote,
|more
so
in relation
to
tional
system. On the other hand,|
the magnitude of the task is | enormous, both from the point of © view of the number of illetrates| (= 90% of the nation's adult bare, pulation), and from that of the. | continuation and cco Bee lite|
racy: ORS
sate | Si very size of the task | | conclufirst a with us leaves egei aSSronenataooeeerana at +
with
which we began this first report ~ Won our work, is true for the
|whole of Guinea-Bissau,
no colonial heritage that weighs|
| so heavilyvon thé Larger) educa>ey
| onc
| trap it is even literacy.
read
and
remains
to be done. Such a situa-
tion offers both advantages and | difficulties. On the one hand,
| in itself.
|
work in the field of literacy fer aie
so to speak, BPR for there is
SO
wr:
For almost everything here still | effort,a
e
ae
anend
:
hee
|eee
| — ee
1
oa Oe
Gee
i
ba my ee
|
| in two directions: ee
towards
present
the group's
social
past
practice,
we are about
to noe jour third
| 4 or oi ear and we ue omaaa iene have
Pes
towards
the future,
en-
under-
couraging a critical standing; -
and
stimulat-
ing the group to conscious
and creative involvement in bettering the reality around
them. erence, =Oe Leet
_
-
approa-
|ches which will have to be
_
|tested in practice. These ap-
|proaches will have to grow out
_ [of the work already going on in
_ |Guinea-Bissau itself and from
| |the discussion around the reHite iz
enee 2 ieee: literacy
1 mobilizatic Reha the Sana ee anew ‘so-
ye
,
Clearly,
the meaning
| content of such group
and the
involve-
ment for transforming reality | must relate to and harmonize | with the basic choices and spe-
cific programs of economic de-
| velopment and social organization as defined the Government.
by the Party
The first attempts attempts
| literacy work in the rural
and
at
| areasof the country will probab-
ly begin within the next few
months. The immediate fore us, therefore,
tasks be-
consist
in
trying to get the work already | begun in the neighborhoods of
Bissau (which we considered in Chapter 3), out of the present
‘deadlock and, secouaiya in | planning the launching of these | pilot projects in the countryside.
And,
a choice must
be made
| to determine which rural regions
| offer the most favourable condi-
eae eee to the pro: project beinune. | carried out and eR:d also c |
tions for beginning the work.
tribute to the. political mobili- | | zation of the community, en-
it seems, to us that priority areas in the countyside must be chosen '| | jin the light of political and technical considerations. Any given | | population will be more motivated for the literacy programif it has |
enthusiastically the
liberation
participated
struggle
in
mulated the rich cultural and develop.
if
and po-
However,
the
of the
past
Literacy work could also go | which the community takes res-
the
literacy
cam-
and provide
an
opening towards the future, mentioned above, the chosen must
be
in process
| ponsibility
fin the
| health,
whether
producing
| work and preparing them for the | concrete tasks to be accomp= lished in thefram
| Pan ee|
to read
in traditional
ways.
©
On
the other hand, literacy can take }on much more meaning if it is related to new production tech|niques being introduced in a par|ticular
area
or the
creation
new production units, for example,
OF
such as,
agricultural
coopewithin
ratives.
In other words,
process,
literacy could a
the context of a transformation
tate the peasant's
cquisi t
new technical understan
it could be related to
area, playing the double role | of motivating the population ae [oe to assume responsibility mks
of experiencing
learning
|
orto Gli. areaof public
the launching of a health or hygiene SOME DC acre, a chosen
as region
and write corresponds to a real |need for the peasant in a rural larea who continues living and
for certain basic
| community services. For example.
'a socio-economic transformation. This point seems extremely imPontantato us, Or it is ‘questionjable
che: out-
| hand in hand with a process by
|paign is to go beyond a celebra|}tion
out and oe Sipe side.
|criterion of political receptivity growing out of the richness of a group's past experience is not Surricient.
than being simply pas neficiaries" of a plan worked:
and accu-
[litical experience which the program would hope to bring up to |date
abling the peasant to take charge of the process of cha ie rather :
©
ce ;
a ry4S ag
V
7
>;
re Arty Le a
ae
r
Ebene te che PAIGC certainly
did not have as strong an educational impact as the struggle it-
| self. It would seem that this |historical example demonstrates
| very clearly that a people's | total existential experience
can
| become a fundamental source of indamer
y / process aes es Ps EEN in| _
|only to the extent that it | succeeds in systematizing the ge-
-people concerned as its raw |material, that would oa gohan a
| neral experience being lived and brought to life by the people's
adual redefinition of ‘the whole
-|sascatsonan process, aimed at St genuinely
adapting it to the
ah nation! Ss interests and needs. Teh
| complementary role, and even then
© a continuing education, using the life and social practice of | major contribution to the
7
' knowledge. Within such a con‘text, the school can play only a
|
|
social practice. De
ik
These remarks which we can already deduce
from the historical
perience
of Guinea-Bissau,
ex-
can
7
serve as a source of serious
Hetae areidgievonted with ques-
reflection
sctelnte for which no one has yet {found answers. This isperhaps Ki
al, for we are trying |
for anyone working
the area of education in other
| socio-cultural contexts.
in
They
lead back to primary questions
concerning the very nature of education, which educators, unfortunately, too often forgetin the maze of their techniques and materials which reduce education to only one of its aspects - and not
| the most important one: that of | technical and professional Pecan tn:
OLIVEIRA Rosiska DARCY DE
Miguel DARCY DE OLIVETRA Geneva, Spring
19 7 6
The text of this document, written by two members of the IDAC staff - Rosiska Darcy de Oliveira and Miguel Darcy de Oliveira - is based on the work of a team composed of Guinean comrades and other
members Freire,
Claudius
IDAC
The
of
IDAC
Elza
Ceccon
in the
involved
Freire,
and
involvement
José
Marcos
program,
Oeuvray,
Arruda.
Guinea-Bissau
in
Paulo
Giséle
Barbosa,
was
made
possible financially by a grant from the CommisParticipation in Developsion of the Churches' (CCPD) of the World Coundil of Churches. We ment wish
to
them
thank
for
their
interest
and
their
support.
We
have
also
appreciated
with the World Education.
Council
of
a close
collaboration
Churches'
office
of
BI
NOTES
(1)
The PAIGC, as its name indicates, has always felt that the people of Guinea-Bissau and the Cape Verde Islands, having experienced the same colonial domination and having struggled together within the same liberation movement, are part of one united political and socio-cultural structure. If, for the moment, Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde are two separate independent nations, the PAIGC is the fundamental political force both on the continent and in the islands.
Even though there is no pre-established timetable, the gradual unification of the two peoples is already in process. As for this present document, we center our attention specifically on Guinea-Bissau, which we know better. The situation
time
as
later
(2)
in
Cape
recently
reports
on
Verde,
as
which
February
the
we
visited
1976,
development
will
of
our
for
be
the
first
discussed
in
work.
A basic resource for an analysis of the colonial domination and the liberation struggle in Guinea-Bissau are the numerous writings of Amilcar Cabral. The most complete publication of his writings is a two volume work in French, pub-
lished
by Maspero
in
1975,
L‘arme
de
pratique révolutionnaire. Perhaps in English is Cabral's Revolution
Monthly
Review
Press,
1969.
la
théorie
one of the in Guinea,
A good
analysis
and
La
best available New York,
of
the
PAIGC's
role in the birth of the independent state of Guinea-Bissau is the work of a Swedish writer, Lars Rudebeck, GuineaBissau: A Study of Political Mobilization, (The Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, Uppsala, 1974). We should also like to mention the work of Basil Davidson, The Liberation
guin
(3)
52
of
Guinea
African
This text is 12, The Role The document
French,
-
Aspects
Library,
of
an
African
Revolution
(Pen-
1969.
reproduced in UNESCO Document SHC-72/CONF. 6/ of Culture in the Struggle of Independence. is a mimeographed English translation from the
prepared
by UNESCO
in 1972.
(4)
In
this
analysis
of
distortions
in
the
educational
inherited from colonialism, we drew from the sident Julius Nyerere of Tanzania, Education
Reliance.
This
essay
is
writings, Freedom and Univ. Press, 1973. (5)
According
to
Erick
Guinée-Bissau"
reproduced
Socialism,
Pessiot's
printed
in
in the
February
this inverse pyramid of primary Guinea-Bissau is represented by the year 1974 :
1975
and the
by
pre-school
2 aa Soe
of
orade
students
3,700 a
ee
ce a 3,000
year
2,000
second
i third ~
1,400 600
fourth
meee eth
300
6 sixth
350
x
80
seventh
CREDITS
Paris,
education in figures for
10,500 6,500
fourth
TT
en
25500
Chae
first
his
28,500
second
CI
IRFED,
secondary following
of
Oxford
d'Education
Number
atest
collection
Dar-es-Salaam,
"Problémes
system
work of Prefor Self-
Michael
Ruetz
I DAC
Koen
4
Ove
4e7 4,
2460
8
Miiteury
Uliano
Cover,
sor
Infomation
Lucas
Wessing/CIDAC
Lb,
2t,
ico
16
Doma
Ss
eam
es ‘
hed
eal
Just before IDAC's second trip to Guinea-Bissau, aA February 1976, one oF the members of the team - Claudius Ceccon - put eee her an educational material which could be used u in t rainning literacy Ho
program
instructors.
visual program cussion around
;
nay
cuit
Guinea-Bissau
It consists
of an audio-
which attempts to introduce a disthe whole problemof education in
BEES
today.
: NN
‘ ev Shand an audio-visual
Y
form for
Boat ae also to show, through a pr
the flexibility of this means of c it one is able to present in conden which are apparently complex and st sion around them. The first version was changed and enriched in Guinea-! to reactions received
from
its
pres
during our stay in Guinea-Bissau, a
ganized in which the Guineans themse
ducing their own audio-visual
materi
learning to make use of this new wo:
What
we present
here
in the
form
made by the Guineans
themselves
| u accordi: ion.
after
shop was began
y
pro-
|
rapidly
tool.
n
the original
ma-
lifferent - eel the staff of the Ministry of Fh rove &Ed ro