Must we have mission schools?
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
May 10, 2021
The hyped-up religious controversies between schools and students
must stop. The
last one was between a Rasta student and the Achimota
School. And now
there is this one between the Wesley Girls Senior High
School and a few Muslim students.
Many think that these controversies are serious matters, based on
their perspective.
They may be right. Differences in perspective and the way the
matter has been handled so far are the problems. Occurrences of these will continue to harm the nation.
Therefore, there is urgent need for the government to step in to
erase the underlying misunderstandings that lead to the
problems.
One side of the disagreement, as reported by Ghanaweb, has made it
possible for the Ghana Muslim Mission to “admonish Muslims
in Ghana to pray for peace... over the school’s (Wesley
Girls) refusal to allow students to fast.”
The other side comes from Wesley Girls Senior High School, operated
by the Methodist Church of Ghana; stating that students are
not allowed to fast at that age for health reasons.
This difference in engagement is the nature of the misunderstanding
that is rearing its ugly head and is likely to continue to
haunt the nation for years to come.
So, the need for a government policy to clarify things in the
education system is high.
That policy must establish the role for all schools in the
student's life. Additionally, state clearly what other
stakeholders in our society can expect from these schools,
especially the mission ones where the potential for this
type of belief confrontation can occur.
Such policy must provide the guardrails; what to expect, obviously
a purpose-driven good education from all schools, coupled
with the infusion of good discipline in students.
It is not the law that is being challenged here since the schools
are required to admit all, based on merit.
But once on campus, it is the behavior of students that is in
question. One would
think that the wise choice should be to leave this decision
in the hands of the school's administrators.
This way, the schools can be allowed to form their characters and
traditions; to form a magnet, which ought to be the only
sufficient reason why a new student might want to attend a
particular school in the first place.
That achieved, the issue of tolerance for a particular school or
belief system automatically becomes a settled concern, once
the choice of school is made by the student or guardian.
And hence, there will be no reason for a parent or a student to
stalk a school, after having been admitted, to ask it to
respect a tradition not practiced at that school.
There is no need to add more breaches within the
nation’s education system.
If these episodes of clashes between different belief systems in
our schools are allowed to continue, we will be heading
towards one hell of trouble in the immediate years to come.
Notice that the trouble at Wesley Girls is not about the quality of
education or discrimination in admission.
It is about a practice that Wesley Girls says is
ill-suited for the health of girls at that age, while the
Muslim Mission says it is a step on their religion.
But notice how clumsily our society has handled the matter so far,
almost to the point of setting the stage for future
religious conflagrations.
The prominent perspective should have been on discipline and the
lack thereof in our society.
Discipline is the foundation
for all good institutions. Christians and Muslim schools
alike should embrace it, especially in an environment like
ours where it is available only in anemic portions.
Fortunately, outside the home, our mission schools are the only
place left that we can hope to instill discipline.
But these are the same schools that differences in
decorum are now allowed to grow religious conflicts.
Listening to the entire areas of our governance, one hears dead
silence on the issue of discipline at the schools; instead,
the religious concern has been highly touted.
The Minority in Parliament has said that “the position of the
Methodist Church Ghana on the Wesley Girls Senior High
School’s decision to prevent Muslim students from fasting
during the holy month of Ramadan smacks of discrimination
based on religion.”
This statement, indeed, readies the fuse for the conflagration to
come.
And the governing party seems to agree with the sentiment of the
Minority in Parliament, judging by the statement from the
Minister of Education.
Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum, the Minister of Education, has asked for
measures to be put in place …” to address the concerns of
Muslim students.”
He seems to pay no attention to the discipline part, obviously for
political reasons.
He continues by asking for parents of such students “to write to
the school indicating that the school shall not be held
liable for any health condition of the student as a result
of the fast”.
It is reported that the National Chief Imam, after raising
concerns, has welcomed the minister’s directive.
Sadly, the requirement for discipline is not called.
Wesley Girls’ call for health reasons is missing and
not reinforced by none of the messages above.
Instead, the attention has been settled on religious
tolerance.
Again, discipline is what is very much needed in our society.
A key indicator of discipline in a society is the ability of
citizens to expect and respect order.
Discipline is the soft power that allows things to
happen, and for society to grow to its full potential; even
for religions like Christianity and Muslim to thrive.
Without discipline, not much that is healthy can be expected from
the rest of society.
That the Muslim Mission must admonish Ghanaians to pray for peace
is a serious matter.
Maybe a warning?
But seriously, how does one ask an undisciplined society to pray
for peace; wait for the conflagration that may happen, or
hurry to remove the excuse for that conflagration now?
This is why a clear message from the government is needed now, not
later. The
government must not sit idle to see the mission schools
become the conflagration points in our society.
The schools can then keep their standards; discipline restored,
controversies about religious practices on campus minimized,
and politics and religious frictions shoved out of the way.
How difficult will it be for a government to issue such a policy?
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher, www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, May
10, 2021.
Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce,
with credits, unedited. If posted on a website, email a copy
of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish
at all.
|