Contents
- Overview
- #TextbooksMatter Campaign
- SCA rules that #TextbooksMatter
- In the Media
- Opinion Pieces
Overview
In April 2014, SECTION27, representing Basic Education for All (BEFA) made an application to the High Court in Pretoria to force the State to deliver outstanding textbooks to schools in Limpopo. At the time, the Limpopo Department of Education short-delivered at least 793 567 books. SECTION27 and BEFA won this case, but the State has since appealed to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
On 24 November 2015, SECTION27, representing BEFA argued, in the Supreme Court of Appeal that textbooks are an essential component to the right to basic education.

#TextbooksMatter Campaign
Ahead of the court hearing, BEFA kicked off the #TextbooksMatter campaign shining the spotlight the poor state of textbook delivery and the impact on the learners in Limpopo.
In the lead up to the Supreme Court of Appeal hearing on the matter of Basic Education for All versus the Minister of Basic Education Angie Motshekga, SECTION27 and BEFA called on thought leaders across the spectrum of South African society to explain why #TextbooksMatter. The result was a serious of powerful testimonies posted on the SECTION27 and BEFA social media platforms that galvanised a national dialogue around the importance of textbooks as part of the right to basic education. The judgment in what is referred to as the Limpopo Textbooks case lay the foundation for children across the country to access the immediately reliable right to basic education.
Some of the #TextbooksMatter highlights:
- We posted A daily video from thought leaders, authors, activists, artists on the importance of textbooks. These included author Margie Orford, Njabulo Ndebele, Justice Malala and Achmat Dangor. Daily updates were on Basic Education for All and @BEFA_SA
- A high-level Activist Dialogue at the school where it all started in 1976. We hosted a discussion at Morris Isaacson High School in Soweto on Friday, 20 November 2015 at 16:00 with education activist Shaeera Kalla, Gauteng MEC for Education, Panyaza Lesufi and Faranaaz Veriava.
- A community, learner, teacher and parent-led protest march took place in Giyani on 21 November 2015.
“A textbook in a child’s hands is a confirmation that every child’s education matters. Let us keep the promise of education to each child. It is the route to equality and liberation for all of us.”
Gabeba Baderoon, poet and author
“Being able to read – and plan and dream and invent new realities – is the human potential that gives us more access to our creativity.”
Phillippa Yaa de Villiers, author and performance artist
“Never again should any child suffer what people over the decades in South Africa have suffered, the inability to take their destiny into their own hands and use textbooks to progress their lives.”
Justice Malala, Journalist, TV host and political commentator
Supreme Court of Appeals rules that #TextbooksMatter
In December 2015, the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) ruled that the Department of Basic Education’s (DBE) failure to provide learners in Limpopo with their textbooks directly infringed on their rights to basic education, equality and dignity and amounted to unfair discrimination. The DBE’s appeal in the Limpopo textbooks saga was therefore dismissed and Basic Education For All’s (BEFA) cross appeal was upheld. The Court also found that the DBE was in breach of previous court orders.
In the Media


Opinion Pieces
- Textbooks matter: the state goes to court again – Kate Paterson
- It’s best to teach pupils by the book – Faranaaz Veriava
- In Textbook Court Case at stake is government’s commitment to basic education – Faranaaz Veriava
- Why textbooks are a crucial part of every childs education journey – Faranaaz Veriava
- BEFA hopes to win textbooks case at the SCA – Faranaaz Veriava
- South African SCA set to hear the Limpopo textbooks case – Faranaaz Veriava