Julius
Nyerere, lifelong learning and education
Julius
Nyerere, lifelong learning and education. One of Africa’s most respected
figures, Julius Nyerere (1922 – 1999) was a politician of principle and
intelligence. Known as Mwalimu or teacher he had a vision of education and
social action that was rich with possibility.
contents: introduction · ujamma, socialism and self reliance · education for self-reliance · adult education, lifelong learning and learning for liberation · liberation struggles · retirement · further reading and references
Julius Kambarage Nyerere
was born on April 13, 1922 in Butiama, on the eastern shore of lake Victoria in
north west Tanganyika. His father was the chief of the small Zanaki tribe. He
was 12 before he started school (he had to walk 26 miles to Musoma to do so).
Later, he transferred for his secondary education to the Tabora Government
Secondary School. His intelligence was quickly recognized by the Roman Catholic
fathers who taught him. He went on, with their help, to train as a teacher at
Makerere University in Kampala (Uganda). On gaining his Certificate, he taught
for three years and then went on a government scholarship to study history and
political economy for his Master of Arts at the University of Edinburgh (he was
the first Tanzanian to study at a British university and only the second to
gain a university degree outside Africa. In Edinburgh, partly through his
encounter with Fabian thinking, Nyerere began to develop his particular vision
of connecting socialism with African communal living.
On
his return to Tanganyika, Nyerere was forced by the colonial authorities to
make a choice between his political activities and his teaching. He was
reported as saying that he was a schoolmaster by choice and a politician by
accident. Working to bring a number of different nationalist factions into one
grouping he achieved this in 1954 with the formation of TANU (the Tanganyika
African National Union). He became President of the Union (a post he held until
1977), entered the Legislative Council in 1958 and became chief minister in
1960. A year later Tanganyika was granted internal self-government and Nyerere
became premier. Full independence came in December 1961 and he was elected
President in 1962.
Nyerere’s integrity, ability as a political
orator and organizer, and readiness to work with different groupings was a
significant factor in independence being achieved without bloodshed. In this he
was helped by the co-operative attitude of the last British governor – Sir
Richard Turnbull. In 1964, following a coup in Zanzibar (and an attempted coup
in Tanganyika itself) Nyerere negotiated with the new leaders in Zanzibar and
agreed to absorb them into the union government. The result was the creation of
the Republic of Tanzania.
Ujamma,
socialism and self reliance
As
President, Nyerere had to steer a difficult course. By the late 1960s Tanzania
was one of the world’s poorest countries. Like many others it was suffering
from a severe foreign debt burden, a decrease in foreign aid, and a fall in the
price of commodities. His solution, the collectivization of agriculture,
villigization (see Ujamma below) and large-scale nationalization was a unique
blend of socialism and communal life. The vision was set out in the Arusha
Declaration of 1967 (reprinted in Nyerere 1968):
The
objective of socialism in the United Republic of Tanzania is to build a society
in which all members have equal rights and equal opportunities; in which all
can live in peace with their neighbours without suffering or imposing
injustice, being exploited, or exploiting; and in which all have a gradually
increasing basic level of material welfare before any individual lives in
luxury. (Nyerere 1968: 340)
The focus, given the nature of Tanzanian
society, was on rural development. People were encouraged (sometimes forced) to
live and work on a co-operative basis in organized villages or ujamaa (meaning ‘familyhood’ in Kishwahili). The
idea was to extend traditional values and responsibilities around kinship to
Tanzania as a whole.
Julius
Nyerere on the Arusha Declaration
It
is particularly important that we should now understand the connection between
freedom, development, and discipline, because our national policy of creating
socialist villages throughout the rural areas depends upon it. For we have
known for a very long time that development had to go on in the rural areas,
and that this required co-operative activities by the people . . .
When
we tried to promote rural development in the past, we sometimes spent huge sums
of money on establishing a Settlement, and supplying it with modern equipment,
and social services, as well as often providing it with a management hierarchy
. . . All too often, we persuaded people to go into new settlements by
promising them that they could quickly grow rich there, or that Government
would give them services and equipment which they could not hope to receive
either in the towns or in their traditional farming places. In very few cases
was any ideology involved; we thought and talked in terms of greatly increased
output, and of things being provided for the settlers.
What
we were doing, in fact, was thinking of development in terms of things, and not
of people. . . As a result, there have been very many cases where heavy capital
investment has resulted in no increase in output where the investment has been
wasted. And in most of the officially sponsored or supported schemes, the
majority of people who went to settle lost their enthusiasm, and either left
the scheme altogether, or failed to carry out the orders of the outsiders who
were put in charge — and who were not themselves involved in the success or
failure of the project.
It is important, therefore, to realize that
the policy of ujamaa Vijijini is not
intended to be merely a revival of the old settlement schemes under another
name. The Ujamaa village is a new conception, based on the post Arusha
Declaration understanding that what we need to develop is people, not things,
and that people can only develop themselves . . .
Ujamaa
villages are intended to be socialist organizations created by the people, and
governed by those who live and work in them. They cannot be created from
outside, nor governed from outside. No one can be forced into an Ujamaa
village, and no official — at any level — can go and tell the members of an
Ujamaa village what they should do together, and what they should continue to
do as individual farmers . . .
It
is important that these things should be thoroughly understood. It is also
important that the people should not be persuaded to start an Ujamaa village by
promises of the things which will be given to them if they do so. A group of
people must decide to start an Ujamaa village because they have understood that
only through this method can they live and develop in dignity and freedom,
receiving the full benefits of their co-operative endeavour . . .
Unless
the purpose and socialist ideology of an Ujamaa village is understood by the
members from the beginning — at least to some extent it will not survive the
early difficulties. For no-one can guarantee that there will not be a crop
failure in the first or second year — there might be a drought or floods. And
the greater self-discipline which is necessary when working in a community will
only be forthcoming if the people understand what they are doing and why . . .
Nyerere on The Arusha Declaration –
Excerpts from J.K. Nyerere, Freedom and Development (Government
Printer, Dar-es-Salaam, (no date) Reprinted in Freedom
and Development (Oxford University Press, 1973). Copyright
retained by the President.
Within
the Declaration there was a commitment to raising basic living standards (and
an opposition to conspicuous consumption and large private wealth). The
socialism he believed in was ‘people-centred’. Humanness in its fullest sense
rather than wealth creation must come first. Societies become better places
through the development of people rather than the gearing up of production.
This was a matter that Nyerere took to be important both in political and
private terms. Unlike many other politicians, he did not amass a large fortune
through exploiting his position.
The policy met with significant political
resistance (especially when people were forced into rural communes) and little
economic success. Nearly 10 million peasants were moved and many were
effectively forced to give up their land. The idea of collective farming was
less than attractive to many peasants. A large number found themselves worse
off. Productivity went down. However, the focus on human development and
self-reliance did bring some success in other areas notably in health,
education and in political identity.
Education
for self-reliance
As
Yusuf Kassam (1995: 250) has noted, Nyerere’s educational philosophy can be
approached under two main headings: education for self-reliance; and adult
education, lifelong learning and education for liberation. His interest in
self-reliance shares a great deal with Gandhi’s approach. There was a strong
concern to counteract the colonialist assumptions and practices of the
dominant, formal means of education. He saw it as enslaving and oriented to
‘western’ interests and norms. Kassim (1995: 251) sums up his critique of the
Tanzanian (and other former colonies) education system as follows:
1.
Formal education is basically elitist in
nature, catering to the needs and interests of the very small proportion of
those who manage to enter the hierarchical pyramid of formal schooling: ‘We
have not until now questioned the basic system of education which we took over
at the time of Independence. We have never done that because we have never
thought about education except in terms of obtaining teachers, engineers,
administrators, etc. Individually and collectively we have in practice thought
of education as a training for the skills required to earn high salaries in the
modern sector of our economy’ (Nyerere, 1968 267).
2.
The education system divorces its
participants from the society for which they are supposed to be trained.
3.
The system breeds the notion that education
is synonymous with formal schooling, and people are judged and employed on the
basis of their ability to pass examinations and acquire paper qualifications.
4.
The system does not involve its students in
productive work. Such a situation deprives society of their much-needed
contribution to the increase in national economic output and also breeds among
the students a contempt for manual work. (Kassam 1995: 251)
Nyerere
set out his vision in ‘Education for Self Reliance’ (reprinted in Nyerere
1968). Education had to work for the common good, foster co-operation and
promote equality. Further, it had to address the realities of life in Tanzania.
The following changes were proposed:
1.
It should be oriented to rural life.
2.
Teachers and students should engage together
in productive activities and students should participate in the planning and
decision-making process of organizing these activities.
3.
Productive work should become an integral
part of the school curriculum and provide meaningful learning experience
through the integration of theory and practice.
4.
The importance of examinations should be
downgraded.
5.
Children should begin school at age 7 so that
they would be old enough and sufficiently mature to engage in self-reliant and
productive work when they leave school.
6.
Primary education should be complete in
itself rather than merely serving as a means to higher education.
7.
Students should become self-confident and
co-operative, and develop critical and inquiring minds. (summarized in Kassam
1995: 253
Judged today, the educational reforms met
with some success and some failure. The policies were never fully implemented
and had to operate against a background of severe resource shortage and a world
orientation to more individualistic and capitalist understandings of the
relation of education to production. However, primary education became
virtually universal; curriculum materials gained distinctively Tanzanian
flavours; and schooling used local language forms (Samoff 1990).
Adult
education, lifelong learning and learning for liberation
In the Declaration of Dar es Salaam Julius
Nyerere made a ringing call for adult education to be directed at helping
people to help themselves and for it to approached as part of life: ‘integrated
with life and inseparable from it’. For him adult education had two functions.
To:
1.
Inspire both a desire for change, and an
understanding that change is possible.
2.
Help people to make their own decisions, and
to implement those decisions for themselves. (Nyerere 1978: 29, 30)
Julius
Nyerere – The Declaration of Dar – es – Salaam
[Page 27] Man
can only liberate himself or develop himself. He cannot be liberated or
developed by another. For Man makes himself. It is his ability to act
deliberately, for a self-determined purpose, which distinguishes him from the
other animals. The expansion of his own consciousness, and therefore of his
power over himself, his environment, and his society, must therefore ultimately
be what we mean by development.
So development is for Man, by Man, and of
Man. The same is true of education. Its purpose is the liberation of Man from
the restraints and limitations of ignorance and dependency. Education has to
increase men’s physical and mental freedom to increase their control over
themselves, their own lives, [page 28] the
environment in which they live. The ideas imparted by education, or released in
the mind through education, should therefore be liberating ideas; the skills
acquired by education should be liberating skills. Nothing else can properly be
called education. Teaching which induces a slave mentality or a sense of
impotence is not education at all — itis attack on the minds of men.
This
means that adult education has to be directed at helping men to develop
themselves. It has to contribute to an enlargement of Man’s ability in every
way. In particular it has to help men to decide for themselves —in
co-operation—what development is. It must help men to think clearly; it must
enable them to examine the possible alternative courses of action; to make a
choice between those alternatives in keeping with their own purposes; and it
must equip them with the ability to translate their decisions into reality.
The
personal and physical aspects of development cannot be separated. It is in the
process of deciding for himself what is development, and deciding in what
direction it should take his society, and in implementing those decisions, that
Man develops himself. For man does not develop himself in a vacuum, in
isolation from his society and his environment; and he certainly cannot be
developed by others. Man’s consciousness is developed in the process of
thinking, and deciding and of acting. His capacity is developed in the process
of doing things.
But
doing things means co-operating with others, for in isolation Man is virtually
helpless physically, and stultified mentally. Education for liberation is
therefore also education for co-operation among men, because it is in
co-operation with others that Man liberates himself from the constraints of
nature, and also those imposed upon him by his fellow-men. Education is thus
intensely personal. In the sense that it has to be a personal experience— no
one cam have his consciousness developed by proxy. But it is also am activity
of great social significance, because the man whom education liberates is a man
in society, and his society will be affected by the change which education
creates in him.
There is another aspect to this. A Man learns
because he wants to do something. And once he has started along this road of
developing his capacity he also learns because he wants to be; to be a more
conscious and understanding person. Learning has not liberated a man if all he
learns to want is a certificate [page 29] on
his wall, and the reputation of being a ‘learned person’— a possessor of
knowledge. For such a desire is merely another aspect of the disease of the
acquisitive society – the accumulation of goods for the sake of accumulating
then. The accumulation of knowledge or, worse still, the accumulation of pieces
of paper which represent a kind of legal tender for such knowledge, has nothing
to do with development.
So
if adult education is to contribute to development, it must be a part of life —
integrated with life and inseparable from it. It is not something which can be
put into a box and taken out for certain periods of the day or week—or certain
periods of a life. And it cannot be imposed: every learner is ultimately a
volunteer, because, however much teaching he is given, only he can learn.
Further, adult education is not something
which can deal with just “agriculture”, or “health”, or “literacy”, or
“mechanical skill”, etc. All these separate branches of education are related
to the total life a man is living, and to the man he is and will become.
Learning how best to grow soy-beans is of little use to a man if it is not
combined with learning about nutrition and/or the existence of a market for the
beans. This means that adult education will promote changes in men, and in
society. And it means that adult education should promote
change, at the same time as it assists men to control both the change which
they induce, and that which is forced upon them by the decisions of other men
or the cataclysms of nature. Further, it means that adult education encompasses
the whole of life, and must build upon what already exists.
Extract from Julius K. Nyerere ‘”Development
is for Man, by Man, and of Man”: The Declaration of Dar es Salaam’ in Budd L.
Hall and J. Roby Kidd (eds.) (1978) Adult Education: A design for
action, Oxford: Pergamon.
Nyerere’s
view of adult education stretched far beyond the classroom. It is ‘anything
which enlarges men’s understanding, activates them, helps them to make their
own decisions, and to implement those decisions for themselves’ (Nyerere 1978:
30). It includes ‘agitation’ and ‘organization and mobilization’. There are two
types of educator involved:
·
generalists like community
development workers, political activists and religious teachers. Such people
are not politically neutral, they will affect how people look at the society in
which they live, and how they seek to use it or change it. (ibid.: 31)
·
specialists like
those concerned with health, agriculture, child care, management and literacy.
Adult
education, for Nyerere, doesn’t have a beginning or an end. It should not be
pressed into self-contained compartments. Rather we need to think of lifelong
learning. Living is learning and learning is about trying to live better. ‘We
must accept that education and working are both parts of living and should
continue from birth until we die (1973: 300-301).
In
terms of method, two aspects stand out:
·
Educators do not give to another something
they possess. Rather, they help learners to develop their own potential and
capacity.
·
Those that educators work with have
experience and knowledge about the subjects they are interested in – although
they may not realize it.
[B]y
drawing out the things the learner already knows, and showing their relevance
to the new thing which has to be learnt, the teacher has done three things. He
has built up the self-confidence of the man who wants to learn, by showing him
that he is capable of contributing. He has demonstrated the relevance of
experience and observation as a method of learning when combined with thought
and analysis. And he ha shown what I might call the “mutuality” of
learning—that is, that by sharing our knowledge we extend the totality of our
understanding and our control over our lives. (1978: 33)
The
teacher of adults is , for Nyerere, a leader – ‘a guide along a path which all
will travel together’ (ibid.: 34).
In practical terms this approach proved
successful. Mass literacy campaigns were initiated and carried through (for
example, between 1975 and 1977 illiteracy fell from 39 to 27 per cent – by 1986
it was at 9.6 per cent); and various health and agricultural programmes were
mounted e.g the ‘Man is Health’ campaign in 1973, and ‘Food is Life’ (1975)
(Mushi and Bwatwa 1998). Adult education initiatives have made a significant
contribution to mobilising people for development (Kassam 1979).
Liberation
struggles
A committed pan-Africanist, Nyerere provided
a home for a number of African liberation movements including the African
National Congress (ANC) and the Pan African Congress (PAC) of South Africa, Frelimo
when seeking to overthrow Portuguese rule in Mozambique, Zanla (and Robert
Mugabe) in their struggle to unseat the white regime in Southern Rhodesia (now
Zimbabwe). He also opposed the brutal regime of Idi Amin in Uganda. Following a
border invasion by Amin in 1978, a 20,000-strong Tanzanian army along with
rebel groups, invaded Uganda. It took the capital, Kampala, in 1979, restoring
Uganda’s first President, Milton Obote, to power. The battle against Amin was
expensive and placed a strain on government finances. There was considerable
criticism within Tanzania that he had both overlooked domestic issues and had
not paid proper attention to internal human rights abuses. Tanzania was a one
party state – and while there was a strong democratic element in organization
and a concern for consensus, this did not stop Nyerere using the Preventive
Detention Act to imprison opponents. In part this may have been justified by
the need to contain divisiveness, but there does appear to have been a
disjuncture between his commitment to human rights on the world stage, and his
actions at home.
Retirement
In
1985 Nyerere gave up the Presidency but remained as chair of the Party – Chama
Cha Mapinduzi (CCM). He gradually withdrew from active politics, retiring to
his farm in Butiama. In 1990 he relinquished his chairmanship of CCM but
remained active on the world stage as Chair of the Intergovernmental South
Centre. One of his last high profile actions was as the chief mediator in the
Burundi conflict (in 1996). He died in a London hospital of leukaemia on
October 14, 1999.
Tom Porteous, writing in The
Independent (October 15, 1999) summed him up as follows:
Slight
in build, somewhat austere in manner, Nyerere was neither vain nor arrogant. He
set great store by honesty and sincerity. A family man devoted to his wife and
children, he was extremely loyal to his friends – sometimes to a fault. He
inspired among his people both devotion and respect and returned the compliment
by complete dedication to his work on their behalf as head of state. He was
ready to admit his mistakes, and to show flexibility and pragmatism, but never
if this meant compromising his cherished Catholic, humanist and socialist
ideals.
Nyerere’s
life and career are an inspiration to the many Africans who dismiss the notion
current in elite African circles today that justice, dignity and freedom should
be subordinated to the single-minded pursuit of prosperity through economic
liberalisation and structural adjustment. Africa needs more leaders of
Nyerere’s quality, integrity and wisdom.
Further
reading and references
Books
by Julius Nyerere:
Nyerere, J. (1968) Freedom and
Socialism. A Selection from Writings & Speeches, 1965-1967, Dar es
Salaam: Oxford University Press. This book includes The Arusha Declaration;
Education for self-reliance; The varied paths to socialism; The purpose is man;
and socialism and development.
Nyerere, J. (1974) Freedom &
Development, Uhuru Na Maendeleo, Dar es Salaam: Oxford University Press.
Includes essays on adult education; freedom and development; relevance; and ten
years after independence.
Nyerere, J. (1977) Ujamaa-Essays on
Socialism, London: Oxford University Press.
Nyerere, J. (1979) Crusade for
Liberation, Dar es Salaam: Oxford University Press.
See,
also:
Nyerere, J. (1978) ‘”Development is for Man,
by Man, and of Man”: The Declaration of Dar es Salaam’ in B. Hall and J. R.
Kidd (eds.) Adult Learning: A design for action, Oxford: Pergamon
Press.
Material
on Julius Nyerere:
Assensoh, A. B. (1998) African
Political Leadership: Jomo Kenyatta, Kwame Nkrumah, and Julius K.
Nyerere, New York: Krieger Publishing Co.
Kassam, Y. (1995) ‘Julius Nyerere’ in Z.
Morsy (ed.) Thinkers on Education, Paris: UNESCO Publishing.
Legum, C. and Mmari, G. (ed.) (1995) Mwalimu
: The Influence of Nyerere,London: Africa World Press.
Samoff, J. (1990) ‘”Modernizing” a socialist
vision: education in Tanzania’, in M. Carnoy and J. Samoff (eds.) Education and Social Transition in the Third World,
Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press.
Other
references
Hinzen, H. and Hundsdorfer, V. H. (eds.)
(1979) The Tanzanian Experience. Education for liberation and
development, Hamburg: UNESCO Institute for Education.
Kassam, Y. (1978) The Adult Education
Revolution in Tanzania, Nairobi: Shungwaya Publishers.
Mushi, P. A. K. and Bwatwa, Y. D. M. (1998)
‘Tanzania’ in J. Draper (ed.) Africa Adult Education. Chronologies in
Commonwealth cultures, Leicester: NIACE.
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