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Shubha Madhukar
Tata Africa Holdings scholarship
programme in South Africa is giving new meaning and
direction to the lives of students with plenty of potential
but not the means to realise it
Inside the high walls of the
beautiful campus of the University of Witswatersrand
in the heart of Johannesburg, South Africa, the scene
is much the same as at any campus the world over: groups
of students rushing around purposefully, some chatting
animatedly, others sitting quietly under a tree, reading
a book. We meet up with four of them, all recipients
of a special scholarship awarded by the Tata Group and
are impressed with their cheery outlook on life and
the determination to succeed.
The eldest of nine siblings,
Thandi Dladla, 23, grew up in the crime-infested and
poverty-stricken town of Alexandra, near Johannesburg.
With an iron will, Dladla finished school and went on
to study further at Johannesburg. Today, she is a role
model for her seven brothers and one sister. Babyi Olivia,
26, from a similar background in Rustenberg, also struggled
to get to Johannesburg, aspiring for a better future
for her sisters and mother, through further studies.
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For Olivia and Dladla and eight
other students of Witswatersrand University, dreams
are on their way to becoming reality, thanks to scholarships
awarded by Tata Africa Holdings, under the Tata Scholarships
Programme. Today, Olivia has completed her masters in
nursing and is ready to work in the government department
of health. And Dladla has completed a course in industrial
psychology and is doing an internship at MultiChoice,
a company which operates the satellite television service.
The Tata scholarship covered their university fees,
hostel / accommodation expenses and expenditure on books
and research work. This was a huge relief because the
university financial aid covered only the course fees
and they had to supplement their income by working part
time, leaving little time and energy for studies.
The Tata scholarship was
an enormous help, acknowledges Eliphas Nolou,
I could buy books and a computer with the money.
Since the computer labs are always full, having my own
computer really helped me to keep up with my work and
not fall behind the class. Nolou, 31,
is a student of economic science who hopes to make a
career in investment banking. After getting the scholarship,
he was able to give up his part-time job as a security
guard and concentrate on his studies.
Evans Netshivhanbe, 24, is equally
grateful for the scholarship. He says he didnt
know where the money would come from when he applied
for a course in digital arts at the university. Receiving
the scholarship, he says, was a huge relief: I
wasnt stressed anymore. I didnt need to
work and could focus on my studies. He is in the
process of completing his research papers and all ready
to venture into web designing.
These ten students took the first
step forward and the Tata Scholarships Programme gave
them the boost they needed to reach their goal. The
Tata Scholarships Programme aims at disadvantaged students
who have proven their potential to excel in their respective
disciplines. The selection of scholars is done by the
university on the basis of criteria set down by the
company.
To give back to society has been
the Tata way of doing business and the institution of
these scholarships marks the initial steps in the Groups
corporate social responsibility programme in South Africa.
The Group is committed to the cause of higher education
and development of skills in diverse areas. In its second
year, the scholarship programme will be extended to
more students and universities.
A small step in the area of higher
education, the scholarship programme is really a giant
leap in terms of the number of lives it has changed.
It has also set off a multiplier effect, with these
10 students pledging to spread the good work further.
They have promised to return to their school and hometown
and educate people on the benefits of education and
the opportunities and alternatives available. The Tata
spirit of social commitment has rubbed off on them and,
in their own small ways, they are all giving back to
their community.
Uploaded on June 25, 2007

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