In preserving
the history of South Africans of Indian origin, the Documentation
Centre of the University of Durban-Westville, South Africa has
undertaken a project called “Voices of Resistance”
to film, record and transcribe the very significant contribution
of this group of South Africans to the liberation struggle of
South Africa and its new democracy. Many of the people interviewed
have been involved in the Inaugural Summit of the African Union
held in Durban and the World Summit on Sustainable Development
held in Johannesburg.
The project
spans more than 7 decades of resistance and we have interviewed
3 people in their nineties. Mr K. Govinthu, 94, spent most of
his life working in civic organisations and with the youth. Mrs
M. Naidoo,91, worked in a peanut and jam factory in Rossborough,
Durban and was a Passive Resister. For this she was imprisoned
for one month in Pietermaritzburg Prison in 1944. When asked why
she had joined the Passive Resistance, she replied, “I was
fighting for my country.” Mrs Naidoo’s dearest wish
is to meet Mr Mandela.
When the apartheid
regime instituted the Group Areas Act and forced removals, townships
like Chatsworth, Merebank and Phoenix became the repositories
of large-scale political activism. Many of the participants in
the project are from these areas, and it is interesting to note
that despite the disadvantaged backgrounds they came from, many
of them have excelled in their chosen fields.
In selecting
the participants, all areas of society were considered. We have
interviewed people from political organisations, Members of Parliament,
Trade Unions, Educators, Aids Activists, Academics, the Medical
profession, Journalists, the Arts, Civic Organisations, Judges,
Religious organisations and Workers. Many of these men and women
suffered gross human rights violations.
Hoosen Haffejee,
28, had just begun his internship as a dentist. He was abducted
from work, brutally tortured and killed within 24 hours. The police
said that the injuries he sustained were as a result of his resisting
arrest. This was in 1979. His family is seeking the truth. Lenny
Naidoo went into exile in 1986. In 1988 his parents were asked
to come to a small border town to identify his body. They were
only able to identify him by a birthmark on his neck. He and eight
young women, unarmed, were trying to re-enter South Africa when
they were gunned down by Eugene de Kok and his team of killers.
His parents are still inconsolable. Krish Rabilall was killed
with 12 other cadres in a cross-border raid in Swaziland by the
then South African Defence Force. His father died soon afterwards
from grief.
Michigan State
University, through the Mellon Foundation and the MSU/SA Binational
Committee, has made it possible for our university to embark on
this vital project which has regional and national significance.
Funding for this project has made it possible for interviews to
be conducted and transcribed. More importantly, this funding has
enabled the university to develop specialized and much needed
skills in the process of digitisation of sound. This contribution
allows our institution to go further than merely documenting the
Indian contribution to South Africa’s liberation struggle.
It will act as the premier training centre for digitisation technology
to be disseminated. Information obtained from these interviews
will be available on the website of the Documentation Centre once
the project is complete.
Our interviewers
are students from the UDW campus and represent the various racial
groups in our country. This project has not only exposed them
to oral history, but the rich cultural diversity of South Africa.