A homophobic attack at Centenary Secondary School in Sydenham, Durban, has fuelled an unprecedented campaign against sexual and gender discrimination in schools in KwaZulu-Natal.
Teachers who are members of the LGBTQIA+ community say they have been suffering in silence, made to feel inferior and forced to hide their sexual orientation in schools and communities in the province. But since the assault on Serbash Thumbadoo, 29, at Centenary in May, more teachers have felt emboldened to share their experiences and speak out against the injustices they have suffered at the hands of their colleagues and pupils.
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Thumbadoo, a mathematics and life sciences teacher, says they were humiliated and shamed by the school’s principal, who they thought had been supportive after disclosing their gender identity to him.
“Basically, I told the principal that although I was born male, I sometimes identify as a woman,” said Thumbadoo. “I explained that I was going through a transition aimed at finding my identity. He was very understanding and I thought I could count on him for support when I came out of the closet as a bi-gender person. I was mistaken.
“One day I arrived at school dressed in a shirt, a black knee-length skirt, black stockings and flat ankle boots. About 10 minutes later, while I was standing outside the office administration block, the principal saw me and asked what I was wearing. I told him what I was wearing and he became agitated, saying that I am turning his school into a laughing stock and that what I was wearing was a joke.”
Thumbadoo was born in England to a South African father and British mother. They arrived in South Africa as an 11-year-old when their parents relocated. Thumbadoo said they felt shamed by the principal, especially when he started taking pictures with his phone. They couldn’t teach that day because they were sobbing.
Getting help
Thumbadoo informed the shop steward of the South African Democratic Teachers Union (Sadtu), of which they are a member. The union, which has 260 000 members, then embarked on a picket and launched an anti-discrimination campaign to highlight the plight of LGBTQIA+ teachers. It also demanded that the Department of Basic Education take action against its officials who are discriminating against teachers and other subordinates on the basis of their sexual orientation and gender.
The principal in question has since apologised officially to Thumbadoo and Sadtu, but rights activists say this is not enough and Thumbadoo should consider taking the matter further. Approaching the Human Rights Commission to open a hate crime case has been suggested.
Thumbadoo says they had always felt “different” and were not comfortable to live as a boy since they were very young. After the death of their father in 2017 and grandmother in 2019, they took the time to reflect on life.
“It was then that I realised that I was bi-gender. There are days that I identify as a male and on other days as a female. In August 2020, I told my family I was bi-gender. My family, especially my mother, was very supportive and that gave me confidence to face the world with my new reality,” they said.
Thumbadoo’s case has galvanised many LGBTQIA+ teachers who say they have suffered in silence for years as they faced discrimination in the workplace.