During the 1990s, institutional rot festered as Inanda Seminary failed to adapt to the
changing nature of education in the post-apartheid era. The rot’s source can be traced
to the negative ramifications of apartheid’s Bantu Education, first implemented during
the 1950s. Over the decades, Bantu Education fostered a widening investment
disparity between private and state schools designated only for Whites and the
Seminary. As the strictures of Bantu Education relaxed during the 1980s, the
Seminary’s most academically and financially capable students sought education at the
historically advantaged, now multi-racial, schools. In the new political environment of
the 1990s, the Seminary could not compete with more privileged schools and it
therefore lost its monopoly on providing quality education for black girls. The disparity
caused by apartheid combined with educational ‘freedom’ resulted in a ‘brain drain’ from
the Seminary. The school hemorrhaged. As damaging as Bantu Education was to the
Seminary, the school and its leadership were its own worst enemies. The school
became a nest of conflicting constituencies and a kleptocracy. A frugal church and an
uncreative Governing Council were together guilty of culpable inertia. This article
chronicles the demise of the Seminary from 1990 to 1996.