Achievers Primary School

Achievers Primary School

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Achievers Pre & Primary School is located at Kwaluseni, in Matsapha on the road to Ludzeludze.

05/06/2026

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This Sister Souljah Speech Still Sparks Debate #shorts #blackhistory #facts 05/06/2026

This Sister Souljah Speech Still Sparks Debate #shorts #blackhistory #facts In this powerful speech, Sister Souljah shares her perspective on r...

CAN WE WIN? 05/06/2026

CAN WE WIN? This...

05/06/2026

Imagine working from sunrise to sunset in the cotton fields, your back aching, your hands bleeding, and then walking to a secret meeting in the dark to learn the alphabet.

Few people know the story of Little Thomas, the lantern boy.

It was the 1950s. Many older Black adults in the rural South had never learned to read. They had been pulled out of school as children to work the fields. White landowners discouraged literacy—a reading Black person was a dangerous Black person. But the hunger for knowledge burned brighter than the fear of punishment.

According to historical accounts, a retired Black teacher named Miss Eunice started a secret night school. Classes were held in a clearing deep in the woods, far from the overseer's eyes. The students were sharecroppers in their 40s, 50s, and 60s—men and women who had spent their entire lives hiding their illiteracy.

But there was a problem: no light. Miss Eunice needed someone to hold a lantern.

One gripping detail: Thomas was 10 years old, Miss Eunice's grandson. He volunteered. Every night after working in the fields himself, he would walk a mile into the woods, carrying a kerosene lantern. He would stand on a tree stump and hold the lantern high for three hours while the adults sounded out words, traced letters in the dirt, and slowly, painfully, learned to read.

His arms would shake. His eyes would droop. But he never let the lantern drop. "They're learning for all of us," he said. "I can hold a light."

The secret school ran for five years. Over 200 adults learned to read in that clearing. They read the Bible. They read contracts. They read the voting registration forms that would soon be placed before them. And when they voted, they remembered the boy who held the light.

Thomas never forgot those nights. He became a teacher himself, spending 30 years in a classroom with real lights. But he always said the most important classroom he ever served was a clearing in the woods, lit by a single lantern.

What light did someone hold for you?

05/06/2026
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Website

Address


Ludzeludze Road
Kwaluseni

Opening Hours

Monday 07:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 07:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 07:00 - 17:00
Thursday 07:00 - 17:00
Friday 07:00 - 17:00