1
Theatre and Mission Education at Mariannhill
âAll work and no play makes civilisation unattractive to the massesâ1
The Reverend Father Bernard Huss is one of the earliest and most influential pioneers in the social and pedagogical uses of theatre in South Africa. Between 1915 and 1927 Huss was the principal of St Francis College, Mariannhill, where he promoted the use of theatre in education and recreational activities with Africans. The students performed plays at St Francis, at the Native Location Hall at Depot Road in Durban, and at teacher training conferences. Huss was a popular speaker and received numerous invitations to address national forums on the ânative questionâ. Where possible, Huss would combine speaking engagements with play-making exercises using participants who would perform scripted or improvised dramas. He was also a prolific writer and his ideas achieved a considerable measure of national currency.2
The Mariannhill dramas and their attempts to make or contest hegemony are best appreciated against an understanding of the institutional ideas and processes that underpinned the social enactment of evangelism and the new colonial order. Missionaries seized the vocabularies of narrative and drama, including their textual strategies, and used them to realise evangelical aims. Huss acknowledged the theatricality of the Catholic practice of âplacing before the minds of her children the lives of saintly men and womenâ who âilluminateâ Christian teachings and their import for life. Furthermore:
the ritual or religious service abounds in suggestions through all the avenues of the senses, the architecture, decorations, statues, pictures, rites, ceremonies, reverent attitude, sermons, songs, music etc.; these things are suggestive of religious sentiment.3
Consequently, evangelism was in many ways the quintessential melodramatic exercise where personal conduct and social events, even of the most ordinary kind, were emblematic of the battle with African epistemologies and cultures. The beliefs and powers of missions and colonial society had to be staged, not only in plays, but, significantly, in the spatial organisation of the mission, its architectural designs, work rhythms, religious rituals, and even the clothing that African converts wore.4 Mission education approximated a âmachine of learningâ which, with its detailed daily programme and repetitive exercises, represented the wish to order âearthly time for the conquest of salvationâ.5 The ideological vision was that evangelical authority could be demonstrated and exercised through the missionâs mediation of space, time and discourse. The degree to which cultural forms could be conscripted by the mission in the theatre of power that typified colonial society depended on the institutional support that they were able to muster. Mariannhill, in this regard, provided Huss with wide-ranging material and institutional support, not least among which were the intellectual traditions that went into the dramatisation of evangelism at Mariannhill which Huss was to tap into and upon which he would extend. The final sections explore Hussâs ideas on theatre as a genre amenable to the advance of evangelism and social control among Africans in schools and urban centres of Natal.
ORA ET LABORA: âTO LABOUR IS TO PRAYâ6
Huss was born on 27 February 1876 in Oedheimin, Germany and christened Alexander. His father, Alexander Johannes Huss, was a Protestant who went over to Catholicism in 1871 at the wish of his wife, Regina Huss. Hussâs father worked as a carpenter and sculptor. Huss, who was physically frail from a young age and had vision in only one eye, attended the local primary school until the age of ten when he left for the Gymnasium in Landshut, Bavaria, where he excelled as a student. He completed his high school education in 1893 and registered for a degree in Philosophy and Theology in 1894 in Munich. The death of both his parents within two weeks of each other that year saw the nineteen-year-old Huss terminate his studies and join the Trappist Monastery. Huss arrived in South Africa from Bavaria, Germany, on 20 September 1895 and was robed on 1 December 1895 after an eight-week probation. He returned to his theology studies and was ordained as a priest in 1900. His name was changed to Maria Bernardus Huss.7
Mariannhill was set up in the Pinetown area by Father Wendolin Pfanner who arrived in Natal in December 1882, together with thirty-one other monks from the Trappist Order of the monastery of Sept Fons, France, after a brief unsuccessful sojourn at Dunbrody, Port Elizabeth.8 The development of the mission between 1885 and 1909 was phenomenal: by the end of 1885 the Mariannhill monastery had established a church, workshops, roads, buildings for residence, acres of land for agriculture and two schools with boarding facilities for boys and girls. By 1909 Mariannhill mission stations in South Africa consisted of 55 churches and chapels, 25 convents, 41 homes of different kinds, 39 boarding schools and 29 day schools. Mariannhill had the largest number of out-stations â 28 out of 49 Catholic mission stations in the whole country â where 20 000 Africans were baptised, 5 500 deaths were recorded, 946 Christians had been married, and 30 African teachers and 30 catechists had been trained. Hussâs arrival in 1895 coincided with the phenomenal growth of Mariannhillâs congregation, mission stations and schools.9
The monasteryâs success was stimulated by the new colonial relations operative in the region after 1879. The year marked the final conquest of the Zulu kingdom of Cetshwayo who was regarded, by missionaries and colonial authorities alike, as âan absolute hindrance in the way of civilizationâ.10 African dynasties continued to be viewed with hostility after conquest since the kings, now demonised as âdangerous political revolutionariesâ, were feared as possible focal points âaround which dissaffection might uniteâ.11 Although Mariannhill âonly attracted peopleâ in the wake of the âdisplacement, widespread poverty, and increasing vulnerability of people to government exactions of land, labour, and taxesâ,12 many Africans were won over by the association of formal education with Christianity.13
The intellectual ideas operative at Mariannhill were very much in the tradition of the ethnocentric ideologies so prevalent in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the heyday of the British empire. Christianity and imperialism â conflated as constituting âcivilisationâ â were projected as normative models and the ideal negations of African âprimitivenessâ, âpaganismâ, âsavageryâ and âdegenerate moralsâ, states of being that were signified in the ânakednessâ of Africans, their âaversionâ to labour and the absence of industrial progress on the continent.14 Such a symbolic schema expressed âa scale of evaluation between European and African culturesâ where âessentially unrelated qualities are those which assign all cultural differences to the single category of savageâ.15
The first experiments with providing education to African boys at Mariannhill followed a short-lived attempt to share the wisdom of the gospel with four Africans who, it turned out, were more interested in mastering the skills of reading the Book than following the commandments it prescribed.16 Teaching started in earnest in 1884 with Father A.T. Bryant as the director of education,17 assisted by Benjamin Makhaba who was charged with recruiting pupils.18 The daily programme for schoolboys was divided into two and a half hours of schooling and five hours of manual work in the gardens and workshops. The timetable was as follows:
4.15 a.m., rise; 4.30 a.m., Mass, wash and bedmaking; 5.30 a.m., first school; 8 a.m., breakfast; 8.45 a.m., manual work; 11.45 a.m., break; 12 noon, dinner and free time; 1.30 p.m., manual work; 4.30 p.m., school; 5.30 p.m., free time and supper; 7 p.m., school; 7.40 p.m., night prayers and bed.19
Africans were taught the three Rs but the Fathers stressed that for the desired âcharacter formationâ to take place, all aspects of their pupilsâ daily lives needed transformation:
Preaching alone will not do. It is necessary to teach the Bantu a few other things first: Like a child they must be taught to dress and to eat with a spoon rather than with their fingers. They must be taught to work, and to enter and leave their huts upright, like human beings, instead of crawling in and out like dogs. Finally we must settle them on our monastery grounds ... 20
The Abbotâs statement merely emphasises the interrelatedness that was drawn between the moulding of the African body, consciousness and environment; or as one evangelist put it, âcultivating the heathen workers as they cultivated the landâ.21 The stress on labour reflected the view that the significance of âworkâ stretched beyond its role in the political economy: it was also a crucial element of the âmoral economyâ.22 The disparate tropes of space, dress, architecture, body and consciousness were given striking coherence through the use of a ânetwork of textualizationâ.23 The African bodyscape and landscape could then be âreadâ as âvacantâ and âuninscribedâ texts.24 The idea that the body, in the impassioned colonial moral canvas, is an indicator25 of âan inner essenceâ26 is apparent in Father Bryantâs taut remark that their âminds alas! are as dark as their facesâ.27
The first step in the âmetamorphosisâ of pupils at Mariannhill was literally to scrub their bodies of the muck that was symbolic of their culture. This, according to Schimlek, one of the Fathers at the mission, was a âmetamorphosis fit for an Ovid to picture in immortal verseâ.28 In one of his lectures on âMoral Lessonsâ Huss quotes an observation that âmerely to accustom children to ...