We live in a time known as the Information Age, where information is regarded as an important currency or commodity.
Such technological developments should not be confined to the big urban centres, however, but need to reach the remote towns and villages in South Africa as well. That being the case, I was delighted to see a meaningful partnership between the University of Johannesburg’s (UJ) Faculty of Engineering and the South African Jewish Board of Deputies (SAJBD) come to fruition earlier this month, with the launch of a state-of-the-art learning centre, aptly named Nga Tshumisano (Working Together), at Hanyani Secondary School in Tshipise, Limpopo.
On August 4, in the chilly weather in Tshipise village, 80km outside Thohoyandou, more than 100 people gathered…