Thursday, June 15, 2023

16th June Day of the African Child

Day of the African Child (DAC) was instituted in 1991 by the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the OAU in memory of the 16th June 1976 student uprising in Soweto, South Africa. At that time, students marched protesting the poor-quality education they received and demanding to be taught in their languages. During the protest hundreds of school children were killed. The Day of the African Child is celebrated to commemorate these children and the brave action they took to defend their rights. The Day of the African Child also serves to celebrate children of Africa as well as inspire a sober reflection and action towards addressing the challenges that children in Africa face on a daily basis.

We are lucky in Australia to be able to get children books from all over the world. Unfortunately some of them are getting very expensive as the Australian dollar drops in value, but nevertheless we can get them and our students can read about African children. There are several books in our library that enable readers to meet African children. We can read books by African authors such as Niki Daly, Jude Daly, Ken Wilson Max which are easily available, but there are other black African authors, such as Nansubuga Nagadya Isdahl,  who are at the beginning of their career and who will become more well known. Below are books that will introduce you to African children. They are not all written by African authors but they do allow our children to see others' lives.

• In Once Upon a Time by Niki Daly we meet Sarie, a rural South African girl, who dreads reading aloud in school: words on the page "tripped up her tongue. She stuttered and stammered over them." Just the reason African schools should have children's books in their first language! And if you have children who think their school life is hard read Rain School by James Rumford.

• Meet Handa if you haven't already, in the wonderful set of titles by Eileen Browne, Handa's Surprise, Handa's Hen , Handa's Noisy Night and Handa's Surprising Day.

• Meet Anna Hibiscus, a child living in modern West Africa. She lives in Nigeria with her mother, her father, her baby twin brothers, and lots and lots of her family.  She is the main character in a series of books by Atinuke. There are three picture books,  Anna Hibiscus' Song, Splash Anna Hibiscus! and Double Trouble for Anna Hibiscus! and eight short chapter books.

• Atinuke also has a series of books, Too Small Tola about Tola who lives in a flat in Lagos with her sister, Moji, who is very clever, her brother Dapo who is very fast and her Grandmummy who is very bossy. Tola is small but determined. There are already four titles.

• A third series by Atinuke, The Number One Car Spotter is about Oluwalase Babatunde Benson or No 1 as he is known. His hobby is car spotting and he is good at solving all the problems in his village. There are six books!

Meet Jamela, a mischievous young girl who has lots of fun in books about her life with her mother. Niki Daly has written and illustrated five endearing Jamela titles, not all of which are still in print.

• In another newer book by Niki Daly, On My Papa's Shoulders we meet a child who has just started school and this story introduces his whole family, Mama, Papa, Gogo and Tata and their South African urban environment.

Meet Lolo, another of Daly's enchanting South African children. She lives with her mother and Gogo. There are now four early reader chapter books about her, Here Comes LoloHooray for Lolo, You're a Star, Lolo and Fly High Lolo.

• Meet Lalla in Deep in the Sahara by Kelly Cunnane. She  lives in the Muslim country of Mauritania, and more than anything, she wants to wear a malafa, the colourful cloth Mauritanian women, like her mama and big sister, wear to cover their heads and clothes in public.

• Meet Bintou in Bintou's Braids by Sylvaine Diouf.  She wants braids. Long, pretty braids, woven with gold coins and seashells, just like her older sister and the other women in her family. But she is too young for braids.

• Meet Beatrice in Beatrice's Goat  by Page McBrier. More than anything, Beatrice longs to be a schoolgirl. But in her small African village, only children who can afford uniforms and books can go to school. Beatrice knows that with six children to care for, her family is much too poor. But when Beatrice receives a wonderful gift from some people far away -- a goat she names Mugisa (which means "luck") who gives milk that Beatrice can sell. With Mugisa's help, it looks as if Beatrice's dream may come true after all. 

• Meet Saruni in My Rows and Piles of Coins by Tololwa M. Moller. Saruni is saving his precious coins for a red and blue bicycle. How happy he will be when he can help his mother carry heavy loads to market on his very own bicycle--and how disappointed he is to discover that he hasn't saved nearly enough! 

• Meet Mustafa in My Father's Shop by Satomi Ichikawa There is a rug in his father's  shop in Morocco that Mustafa loves. Mustafa s father would like him to know some words in other languages too, and he tells Mustafa that he may have the rug if he agrees to learn. He finds a very different way of learning foreign languages...and of getting tourists to visit his father's shop. This book will really make you smile. Read this alongside Jeannie Baker's Mirror.

• Meet Fatima in Gogo's List by Portia Derry. Fatima is a young girl in Ghana who is determined to save the day. She wants to help Gogo with her to-do list so that everyone will realise that she is a big girl now! But things don’t go exactly as expected ... 

Meet Kondi in Galimoto by Karen Lynn Williams. Kondi is determined to make a galimoto -- a toy vehicle made of wire. His brother laughs at the idea, but all day Kondi goes about gathering up the wire he needs. By nightfall, his wonderful galimoto is ready for the village children to play with in the light of the moon.

Meet Gie Gie in The Water Princess by Susan Verde. Gie Gie is inspired by the childhood of African-born model Georgie Badiel. Clean drinking water is scarce in her small African village. And try as she might, Gie Gie cannot bring the water closer; she cannot make it run clearer. Every morning, she rises before the sun to make the long journey to the well.

• Meet Jojo in Jojo's Wire Car by Veronica Lamond. Jojo is a busy little boy who lives with his granny in East Africa.He is expected to help with the chores, do well in school and also help earn money. One day, a Wire Car Competition is announced and, along with all the other village children, Jojo enters to try to win the prize.

• Meet Fatou in Fatou, Fetch the Water by Neil Griffiths. Fatou appears to be a very forgetful child. The story is set in the smallest country in Africa, The Gambia and the picture book contains a section of facts about the cultures and traditions of this colourful nation, so you can learn as well as enjoy.

• Meet Penda in  in Don't Spill the Milk  by Stephen Davies. Penda carries a bowl of milk on her head across dunes and the River Niger, and even up a mountain, without spilling a drop despite many distractions. She gets a surprise when she arrives at the grasslands to give her father his lunch. 










Of course the library has others too:










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