Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Oprah's Good Intentions
Rev. Irene Monroe
31 Jan 2007
🖨️ Print Article
Oprah's Good Intentions
Oprah's Good Intentions

Oprah Winfrey's $40 million gift of a school for South African girls, although laudable, has been criticized for failing to produce the "greatest good for the greatest number." The author cautions that Ms. Winfrey's philanthropy may be seen as a kind of benevolent paternalism - or worse, as a shrine to herself.

"Grassroots activists say Oprah's gift fails to produce the greatest good for the greatest number."
 

The Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in Henley-on-Klip, just 25 miles south of Johannesburg, opened on January 2 . Zeroing in on the country's substandard educational system, Oprah's academy is one huge step toward remediation. But Oprah's generous gift has received condemnation at home and abroad, questioning her philanthropic motives, and  raising ethical questions of what it means for Americans to give to Third World countries without imposing self-serving agendas and their own moral imperatives.

In a country plagued by HIV/AIDS, on a continent with approximately 53 million orphans, 12 million of whom lost at least one parent to AIDS, and with all the diseases and concomitant problems that come with poverty, Oprah's  extravagance for only 152 girls has many people wondering. Why would she spend $40 million on one school when she could have spent $1 million on 40 schools - if her objective is to improve and democratize education for girls throughout South Africa.  For many grassroots organizations and activists in South Africa, fails to distribute her huge donation in a way that produces the greatest good for the greatest number. In the eyes of Oprah's critics, the academy is a world stage shrine built to herself, disguised as good will.
 
Many South African educators worry that Oprah is replicating the American paradigm of elite education. While they applaud Ms. Winfrey's goal to educate young girls to become the country's future leaders, they worry that the project might produce a privileged class that will not only become disconnected from their families and friends, but also disinterested in the ongoing struggles of their communities. Too many of Africa's educated classes leave family and village for a chance at success, never to return. Consequently, the monies and resources poured into these students never benefit their communities, and contribute to their country's brain-drain.
 
"In the eyes of Oprah's critics, the academy is a world stage shrine built to herself, disguised as good will."
 
Another criticism of Oprah's excesses is in the design of the school: luxuries the girls have never seen the likes of such as fireplaces in each building, white duvets for each bed, a beauty parlor, and yoga  spa. Oprah's critics feel that she's imposing  a vision of  American "bling bling," when most South African students would be content with school uniforms, books and meals. On the other hand, these critics may seem to suggest that because these young black girls have not had such creature comforts in their lives they do not deserve them. 
 
Others ask why the question of gender was not raised during the international effort to rescue the "Lost Boys of Sudan" who were displaced or orphaned in their country's second civil war.
 
In South Africa there is another type of war going on that profoundly and disproportionately impacts females. Violence against women has not abated since the end of Apartheid. South Africa has come to be known as the rape capitol of the world. The Medical Research Council reports that 58% of young boys and girls between the ages of 10 and 19 do not  view forced sex as sexual violence, and believe that girls and women do not have a right to say no to their boyfriends  and husbands. Every six hours a South African woman is killed by her partner, lesbians are often subjected to gang-rape to punish them for not being "real women," and millions of women are infected with HIV/AIDS because of gender-based violence. 
 
"South Africa has come to be known as the rape capitol of the world."
 
Unquestionably, Oprah should be applauded for her effort to empower young South African girls. However, she disempowers them and diminishes her gift by ignoring community sensitivities.

While it is admirable for Americans to want to help Third World countries in need, it is equally as important for us to respectfully ask how we can best meet those needs - the cardinal rule in International Philanthropy 101. Otherwise, Americans' donations - albeit motivated by good intentions, as Oprah's is - will continue to be perceived by Third World countries as unexamined acts of benevolent paternalism, at best, or unbridled colonialism, at worst. Why? Because how we give matters as much as what we give.

Rev. Irene Monroe is a public speaker and free-lance journalist based in Cambridge, MA. She can be contacted at revimonroe@earthlink.net.
Oprah

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Oprah & Obama:  Corporate Marketing for a Corporate Campaign
Bruce A. Dixon , BAR managing editor
Oprah & Obama: Corporate Marketing for a Corporate Campaign
12 December 2007
  Two of the best marketers in the U.S. teamed up for a three-state weekend extravaganza of vapid, substance-devoid entertainment posing as…
The Oprah Effect
Tim Wise
The Oprah Effect
25 October 2006
Do American whites use Oprah to ignore, obscure or minimize the effects of racism and white privilege in this country.  Scholar Tim Wise…

More Stories


  • Erica Caines
    Dialectics, Iran and the Long Durée of Anticolonial Revolution
    08 Apr 2026
    The war on Iran is part of a class war against any country that refuses to open itself up for foreign profit. Understanding Iran means seeing its fight as part of the same struggle that defines the…
  • Adam Mahoney
    An Oil Explosion in a Black Texas Town Traces Back to Trump’s Iran and Venezuela Crises
    08 Apr 2026
    “The chickens have come home to roost,” one resident said. “Our exact fears have come true.”
  • BAR Radio Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio April 3, 2026
    03 Apr 2026
    In this week’s segment, we discuss the impact on the voting rights of Black people if the SAVE Act is signed into law. But we begin with a discussion of an historic vote at the United Nations which…
  • UN resolution vote
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Crime Against Humanity
    03 Apr 2026
    Kwesi Pratt Jr. is General Secretary of the Socialist Movement of Ghana.
  • Stop the SAVE Act
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Votes Jeopardized by the SAVE Act
    03 Apr 2026
    The SAVE Act would require proof of U.S. citizenship to be presented in person in order to register to vote in this country and would disenfranchise millions of people who are currently able to vote…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us