Miss SA 2022 Ndavi Nokeri learns about the importance of human origins

MissSA Ndavi Nokeri with Wendy Maduwa and learners from St Ansgars High School.Image:Indirect Media

MissSA Ndavi Nokeri with Wendy Maduwa and learners from St Ansgars High School.Image:Indirect Media

Published Oct 13, 2022

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Miss South Africa 2022 Ndavi Nokeri went back to school for a lesson in palaeoanthropology and alien invasive plant (AIP) species when she visited the Malapa Motsetse Foundation’s Explorer Centre this week.

Nokeri was the inspirational guest speaker at a teaching and learning event for learners who attend St Ansgar’s High School located close to the reserve.

The beauty queen and the learners were introduced to Umsuka, a public palaeoanthropology programme aimed at increasing the accessibility of common fossil hominin heritage for South Africans of diverse backgrounds.

The programme creates insightful educational experiences for learners by exposing them to the GCNR’s fossil sites, the uniquely curated Malapa Museum as well as the science behind palaeoanthropology.

To date, 10 schools and 500 learners, predominantly from disadvantaged communities, visit the site each quarter.

MissSA Ndavi Nokeri with St Ansgars High School learners Charmaine Mkhabela and Asande Buthelezi.Image:Indirect Media

Wendy Maduwa, GCNR’s AIP and Umsuka programme manager, explained: “Our aim is to engage a wide audience with the past in ways that unite us in the present and help us work towards a better-shared future.”

With regard to AIPs, Maduwa said they posed a threat to the ecosystem as they compete with indigenous species in a habitat.

“They also have a detrimental impact on water security (they deplete surface water run-off and groundwater recharge) as well as the ecological functioning of natural systems and the efficient agricultural use of land. They cause soil erosion and amplify the effects of fires and floods.”

Education in all its forms is close to Nokeri’s heart and she has devoted her Miss South Africa reign to redressing the imbalances in education through her advocacy campaign, Ed-Unite, which will be launched this week.

“There needs to be a level playing field for everyone – rich or poor, urban or rural – when it comes to education. As Nelson Mandela said, ‘Education is the most powerful weapon you can use to change the world.’ Through Ed-Unite, I am working as the link between big business and schools and learners, matching funding with need.”

Nokeri and Maduwa discovered that they are both University of Pretoria alumni and the first people in their immediate families to gain a university degree, agreeing that education has changed the course of their lives.

Nokeri, who hails from Tzaneen in Limpopo, is set to jet off to New Orleans in the US in January next year to represent South Africa at the Miss Universe finale and will take with her a message reinforcing the importance of equal education.