Checkmate: Selfless Gugulethu chess coach shares her passion with youth

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Checkmate: Selfless Gugulethu chess coach shares her passion with youth
Checkmate: Selfless Gugulethu chess coach shares her passion with youth

Africa-Press – South-Africa. Gugulethu Chess College founder Babalwa Rubusana goes from class to class at Luzuko Primary School, collecting pupils on the Under-11 chess team.

Founded in 2016 and aimed at young children, the college is a no-fee mobile chess school for pupils from disadvantaged households.

In one classroom, we saw several Grade 4 pupils and one Grade 5 pupil rushing to the desks already set up with chess boards and chess pieces.

Rubusana, 36, says a teacher at her primary school first taught her to play, and she fell in love with the game. She started the club to share her passion with pupils in the area where chess is not a common extracurricular activity.

She took a leap of faith and resigned from her nine-to-five job.

“I remember how I used to teach my younger brother, who was three at the time, how to play chess. When he started Grade R at Luzuko Primary, I continued teaching him, and his classmates started showing interest and wanted to learn too. This is where I got the idea to start the club with pupils. It has since grown into a college,” says Rubusana.

Rubusana uses her own money to help pupils attend chess tournaments.

She began holding lessons at the Gugulethu Sports Complex every Saturday with over 100 children, but the complex was sometimes rented out, so she moved in 2017.

The chess club then met at the St Francis Adult Education Centre until a few months ago, but she currently teaches in vacant classrooms at different schools.

“There are many struggles and challenges,” she says. “[Township] schools know nothing about chess. The only prevalent sports are soccer and netball, and then there is music. None of the schools have chess boards.”

Rubusana said:

She says many parents are unemployed and cannot afford to contribute when the pupils need to travel to tournaments.

One of her Under-11 star chess players from Luzuko Primary is 10-year-old Phila Mngqibisa. In May, Mngqibisa represented Luzuko in a provincial chess tournament held in George.

“I love chess because it makes you think, and it takes you places. I had a good time in George and I slept in a hotel,” Mngqibisa told GroundUp.

Participating in the Chess Western Province District Top Schools Play-offs last Saturday, the Under-11 team proudly qualified to represent their school provincially, up against many other teams that have greater resources.

The team will again compete in Worcester from 8-10 September.

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