| Subject: International
Herald Tribune
comment: A language challenge for Timorese schools
International Herald Tribune May 24, 2002
Opinion
A language challenge for Timorese schools
Michael Richardson
UOTOLARI, East Timor - Paradoxically, the neat figure of the Reverend
Damianus Wagur seated behind a school desk in his office epitomizes the
complexity of East Timor's recent history. Wagur, a missionary teacher
from Flores, a predominantly Christian island of Indonesia, directs the
senior high school in this town about 250 kilometers southeast of Dili. He
is one of the last good vestiges of 24 years of Indonesian rule of East
Timor until 1999 as he tries to raise educational standards in difficult
circumstances.
"We have 200 students studying in what was formerly an elementary
school," he said the other day. "The working conditions are not good and
many of the 15 Timorese teachers lack proper professional qualifications."
The education system of East Timor, an overwhelmingly Catholic country, is
the legacy of foreign control - but by two colonial powers that had very
different priorities. For most of the more than 400 years that Portugal
was in charge, it showed little interest in mass education. Nearly all the
schools and other places of learning that existed were run by the Catholic
Church. When Indonesia invaded and occupied East Timor in 1975, the
literacy rate was only around 5 percent. .
By building roads, bridges, schools and village health clinics
Indonesia sought to show itself as a benevolent power. Jakarta saw
universal primary education as an important part of the process of
"Indonesianizing" the East Timorese. Use of Portuguese in schools was
forbidden. East Timorese who wanted to deal with the administration had to
do so in the Indonesian language. Because of the frequent brutality that
accompanied its rule, Indonesia failed to win the hearts and minds of many
local people. But it did succeed in raising literacy levels and
educational standards. By 1999, the final year of Indonesian control, the
adult literacy rate in East Timor was 50 percent for men and 34 percent
for women.
The Indonesian withdrawal included the burning and destruction of many
schools by the military and its Timorese militia allies. Many were rebuilt
or restored to basic operating level during the two and half years of UN
administration that ended at midnight Sunday. More than 240,000 primary
and secondary students headed back to the classroom in October 2001, at
the start of the new school year. Nearly eight out of ten children of
primary school age are enrolled. But there is another complication. East
Timor's new leaders have decided that Portuguese as well as Tetum, the
most widely spoken of the country's 15 or so indigenous languages, will be
the two official languages. They have relegated Indonesian to the status
of a "working" language. The leadership did so partly because of an
emotional attachment to Portuguese, which they used during the resistance
to Indonesian rule. They also feel indebted to Portugal and
Portuguese-speaking countries such as Brazil, Mozambique and Angola for
supporting the independence struggle.
But only about 5 percent of East Timorese speak Portuguese, compared
with an estimated 63 percent who speak Indonesian and 91 percent who speak
Tetum. The latter needs development, including a much enlarged vocabulary
and improved grammatical structure, before it can become a really
expressive national language. That will take at least a decade. In
education, the policy is to introduce Portuguese progressively as the
language of instruction, starting in primary grades one and two in the
current school year, while teaching Portuguese as a second language in
higher grades. The aim is to extend instruction in Portuguese throughout
the school system over the next 13 years.
Wagur points to just one of many problems facing East Timor educators
when he notes out that only one of the 15 teachers at school can speak,
read and write Portuguese. They are being assisted by a teacher from
Portugal, one of about 140 on loan from that country under an educational
and language aid program.
Still, a considerable number of young East Timorese are unhappy with
the decision to use Portuguese, saying that it is discriminatory and
undermines their employment prospects.
"Some of my students ask: Why should we have to learn this colonial
language?" Wagur said.
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