Muslim Education in Democratic South Africa: Convergence or Divergence of Religion and Citizenship?

N. Davids
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract:South Africa's transition to democracy signaled many new beginnings to different people and communities. For the Muslim community, democracy beckoned toward an untraversed path of identity and expression—one unshielded by the seclusion unintentionally provided through apartheid. The changes, while not immediately obvious, were nevertheless profound, no more so than within a new realm of desegregated schools. The extensive migratory patterns of learners to previously “off-limits” schools soon revealed another pattern of exit: The more public schools diversified, the greater the increase in the number of faith-based schools. Although small in relation to the total number of independent schools, the percentage of Muslim schools was significantly higher than the proportion of Muslims in the South African population. In “mapping the terrain” of Muslim education in post-apartheid South Africa, the interest of this article lies, firstly, in understanding the underlying motivation for this proliferation of Muslim schools and, secondly, how the prevalence of faith-based schools might enhance South Africa's democracy.
民主南非的穆斯林教育:宗教与公民身份的趋同还是分化?
摘要:南非向民主的过渡标志着不同人群和社区的许多新开端。对穆斯林群体来说,民主向他们招手,让他们走上一条未曾走过的认同和表达之路——一条没有种族隔离无意间提供的隔离所遮蔽的道路。这些变化虽然不是立即明显的,但却是深刻的,就像在废除种族隔离的学校的新领域一样。学习者向以前“禁止”的学校的广泛迁移模式很快揭示了另一种退出模式:公立学校越多样化,宗教学校的数量增加就越多。虽然相对于独立学校的总数来说,穆斯林学校的百分比很小,但其在南非人口中所占的比例明显高于穆斯林。在绘制后种族隔离时期南非穆斯林教育的“版图”时,本文的兴趣在于,首先,理解穆斯林学校激增的潜在动机,其次,宗教学校的盛行如何可能增强南非的民主。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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