University of KZN’s Compulsory Gender Modules: A Dangerous Ideological Shift

The Mail & Guardian has rightly brought attention to the alarming decision by the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) to enforce compulsory gender modules, a move that threatens to erode the moral fabric of society. While the university seeks to align with progressive global ideologies, such as those promoted in the US, this shift risks disregarding traditional values and the integrity of gender as a biological reality.
The Faculty of Humanities’ decision to make these modules mandatory introduces a dangerous trend—forcing students to embrace a fragmented view of gender. The module pushes Critical Social Justice & Citizenship ideologies that contradict long-standing moral values, making it clear that gender and sex should be viewed as inseparable, rooted in biological facts. Introducing such a controversial policy risks imposing a delusional ideology that fails to acknowledge the natural and binary nature of human existence.
Critics, including those quoted in the Mail & Guardian, question whether the university should take this authoritarian approach to enforce an ideological stance on young minds. Students are being denied the freedom to hold their beliefs, especially when these new theories contradict centuries of established understanding of gender and sex. Such a policy threatens to weaken the moral foundation of future generations, paving the way for a society where facts are altered to fit political agendas.
By imposing these compulsory modules, UKZN disregards not only academic freedom but also the core values that have long guided society. South Africa, already seeing the damaging spread of these ideas, must be cautious in adopting such policies, which ultimately push a misguided narrative onto impressionable minds. It’s crucial to uphold the recognition of two genders—biologically rooted—and resist these delusional attempts to redefine fundamental truths.