The revolutionary government of
General Bashir announced sweeping reforms in
Sudanese education in September 1990. In
consultation with leaders of the Muslim
Brotherhood and Islamic teachers and
administrators, who were the strongest
supporters of his regime, Bashir proclaimed
a new philosophy of education. He allocated
£Sd400 million for the academic year 1990-91
to carry out these reforms and promised to
double the sum if the current education
system could be changed to meet the needs of
Sudan.
The new education philosophy was to
provide a frame of reference for the
reforms. Education was to be based on the
permanence of human nature, religious
values, and physical nature. This could only
be accomplished by a Muslim curriculum,
which in all schools, colleges, and
universities would consist of two parts: an
obligatory and an optional course of study.
The obligatory course to be studied by every
student was to be based on revealed
knowledge concerning all disciplines. All
the essential elements of the obligatory
course would be drawn from the Quran and the
recognized books of the hadith. The
optional course of study would permit the
student to select certain specializations
according to individual aptitudes and
inclinations. Whether the government could
carry out such sweeping reforms throughout
the country in the face of opposition from
within the Sudanese education establishment
and the dearth of resources for implementing
such an ambitious project remained to be
seen. Membership in the Popular Defence
Forces, a paramilitary body allied to the
National Islamic Front, became a requirement
for university admission. By early 1991,
Bashir had decreed that the number of
university students be doubled and that
Arabic replace English as the language of
instruction in universities. He dismissed
about seventy faculty members at the
University of Khartoum who opposed his
reforms. |