Heritage Day

Heritage Day is a call for celebration. South Africa is a culturally-rich country with 11 official languages and it consists of a diverse population of 59 million people. One way to introduce children to the importance of this day is to allow them to have a whole day in their school calendar dedicated to exploring the different facets of the topic of ‘culture’.

The day can begin by allowing learners to dress up in their traditional wear. This is a lovely way to spark conversation about different garments.

Afterwards, you could dive into a pre-made lesson plan. This can include presenting a slideshow on topics such as the ‘history of South Africa’ or even unpacking the 8 world heritage sites:

  • Robben Island (Western Cape) is best known as the place where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned. 
  • iSimangaliso Wetland Park (KwaZulu-Natal) is home to the largest estuary in Africa as well as the southernmost coral reef in Africa.
  • Cradle of Humankind (Gauteng) includes the hominid fossil sites at Swartkrans, Sterkfontein and Kromdraai.
  • Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park (KwaZulu-Natal) is where the most concentrated collection of rock paintings in Africa can be seen.
  • Mapungubwe Heritage Site (Limpopo). This was South Africa’s first kingdom which traded with China and India and is also known as the “place of the stone of wisdom”.
  • Cape Floral Kingdom (Western Cape) is 1 of 18 biodiversity hotspots globally. Some of the protected areas that you may already know are Table Mountain, Cederberg wilderness area and Kirstenbosch Botanical Garden.
  • Richtersveld Cultural and Botanical Landscape (Northern Cape) covers a vast area of mountainous desert in the north-west part of South Africa. 
  • Vredefort Dome (Free State) is where the world’s largest meteorite impact crater is.

For lunch, you could encourage each child to bring a different food or drink that is quintessential to their culture and ask them to explain how it is made or ask them to give an interesting fact about it. This is another brilliant way to encourage casual conversation. 

To add to the ambience, you could get the learners to colour in different flags, and later have a little pop quiz to test them on the different names of the countries. 

Lastly, different dances, songs or interesting traditions specific to their culture can be shown either through physical demonstration or even video clips online. 

Heritage Day is an important day for remembering one’s history and way of life that make us truly unique. It is a day where people should develop an understanding and willingness to learn about other people. And moreover, it is a good day to have a braai in true South African style!

Why Do We Celebrate Heritage Day?

In South Africa, Heritage Day is celebrated on 24th September to honour the various cultures and diversities in our country, from the official languages, our cuisine, our music and creative expressions of our historical inheritance. (Department of Arts and Culture).

I love the annual Heritage Day celebrations at schools, with the colourful traditional costumes and dancing. It is a great celebration of our different cultures.  This year there was no dancing or singing at Cosmo City Primary, but many of the children arrived at school on Wednesday proudly wearing their beautiful and varied traditional dress, together with their masks.

Before 1994 some heritages were not freely appreciated or promoted in South Africa. In our democracy it is important for us to recognise the significance of our living heritage and to safeguard it for future generations. Language is an important part of people’s identities and their living heritage, and everyone in South Africa has the right to use any of the 11 official languages of their choice.

In Cosmo City Primary School, where we are conducting our pilot study, children are addressed by their teachers in their home languages, but a lot of formal teaching is conducted in English, and most textbooks are in English.  The graded reading scheme that we will be using for our Book village App has been specially developed for South African children learning English as their first additional language. The books depict the everyday lives of South African children, making them easier for the children to relate to than books set in England or America.  Other South African languages will be added as they become available.

Whilst most of the books in the Book Village library are in English, we have been trying our best to include books in the other SA languages so that the children can enjoy reading in their mother tongue.  We have formed a partnership with the excellent Nal’ibali organisation, and their wonderful stories, available in many South African languages, have been digitised and included in our library for children to borrow.

Sign Up To Be Part Of Book Village!

By signing up to become a volunteer, you will be among the first to hear when the Book Village app officially launches and have the opportunity to be among the first people in the world to start making an impact through the Book Village platform.