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But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was: and when he saw him, he had compassion on him. Take care of him; and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I come again, I will repay thee
Above the altar of the St Stithians College Chapel, hangs the Good Samaritan stained glass window. Donated by Ray Bradley, in Memory of his father, the Good Samaritan is a foundational parable to the ethics and values of the College and the Old Stithian Association.
The parable speaks to the the School and Association moto of One & All and is
continues to this day as a founding value of the College and the Old Stithians Association.
The Old Stithian Association and the College moto One & All, speak directly to the parable of the Good Samaritan. A
The Old Stithian Associations is based from our Club House on the ground of the St Stithians College Campus in Sandton, South Africa, known as the One & All - Higher Ground.
All OSA Club Houses are hallowed ground, and named for the binding, uniting ethos of the College, "The One and All".
The Association has a primary Branch in the United Kingdom and several other points of Contact internationally.
Each Chapter and Branch are formal sub-sections of the Association.
United Kingdom Chapter - London
Cape Town, ZA - Branch
Tamarin, MU - Branch
New York, USA - Branch
Austin, USA - Branch
British Columbia, CA - Branch
Toronto, CA - Branch
Melbourne Australia - Branch
DAVID ARENDSE
PHILIP BRADFORD
BRUNO FERNANDES
RUSSELL HARVEY
ROB HAWTON
TSHEPANG KHUNOU
CHRIS KYPRIANIDES
SIMPHIWE MASHEGO
GAVIN MEIRING
SHMAEL MOTSOELI
ASANTE NXUMALO
TSHEPO PULE
JOCK SEELIGER
THABANG SEKETE
RICHARD SIBEKO
ISRAEL SKOSANA*
LARA STOCKIGT
LAUREN URDANG
LUSANDA ZUMA
*CHAIRPERSON
The administration, regulation and management of the affairs of the Association are vested in the Committee.
Governed primarily by an Executive Committee which is expressly structured around Members elected to fixed-term Offices on the Committee. Any Member is eligible for election to the Committee. The College and its Schools are represented on the OSA Committee by the Rector (Voting), a Representative of each of the 7 Schools, and 1 pupil representative each for the Boys & Girls Colleges.
In order to join the Committee in an executive function an individual must be elected into a given office, where they serve a 2 year term of that office (save for the 3 year term for the Office of the Chairperson).
No single person directly or indirectly controls the decision-making powers of the Association, and Committee Members are of generally equal status, who must act in concert for the co-operative management and administration of the Association.
The OSA exists as a Voluntary Association distinct from the College though with formal and enshrined representation on the College Trust and through the College's Governance Structures including the College Council and its Sub-Committees.
The Association is a Registered Non-Profit with the Department of Social Development, South Africa; and its colours, badge and emblems are Registered with the South African Bureau of Heraldry.
Modelled closely on fundementals of constitutional governance, and deliberative orders of government; the OSA's structure, governance and traditions reflect the model of British Public schooling in which the College is rooted, and is closely modelled on the Old Boy's Association of historic schools such as the Old Etonian Association.
The Association enjoy representation on the College Council through five (5) ex-officio seats, and several more Council sub-committees to which it is entitled representation.
The Committee serves for an on behalf of Members in the day to day running of the Association.
The Association was built and founded on the efforts, support and financing of several key St Stithians College families and parents.
Functionally the OSA is the dividend of a strong, highly engage group of founding and early parents who laid much of the bedrock that is the College. These parents and families saw both a practical desire of Old Boys to Associate, along with the formation and existence of a strong and healthy Old Boys Association - as a critical element to the long term success of the College they had worked so hard to establish.
Founder families such as the Tuckers, Bradleys, Woolers, Rankines and Lewis' remained the bedrock of the Association in its first decades of the OSA.
The roles of early families, founding alumni and dedicate parents, cannot be understated in the success and history of the Association.
This remains true, to this day. If you know where to look, you will see the impact and symbols of family as an anchors to the OSA through the college campus and it the structures of the Association. Perhaps the best example of which is the existence of formal Family Membership to the OSA, enshrined in its constitution.
An early and significant symbol of the connection between the founding of the College and the founding of the Association arrived in 1968 for its 10th Anniversary Celebrations, the ornamental sundial that stands to this day in the Boys College Quad.
Centre to the ethos and devotion of the College is the Good Samaritan Window in the Chapel, equally a symbol of family, of the father son relationships that were so present in the establishment of the OSA. Sons, the new generation of St Stithians Old Boys Matriculating from the College, supported by their father (and mothers), who were themselves dedicate and engaged parents. This is a true as ever in the Good Samaritan window, dedicated by a founding family and father (Ray Bradley) to his father. Ray, himself a Member of Council helped establish the OSA, his son Ross Bradley was and early Chairman and one of the Associations first Old Boys on council.
This legacy of families helping to build the OSA lives on in the foyer of the One & All Higher Ground, where the merit boards list the Family Members of the Association, at whose hands and by whose donations a substantial amount of Higher Ground was build.