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Helen Joseph

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Helen Beatrice Joseph
Helen Joseph 1941
Helen Joseph 1941
Born(1905-04-08)8 April 1905
Died25 December 1992(1992-12-25)(aged 87)
Resting placeAvalon Cemetery
NationalitySouth African
Occupationanti-apartheidactivist

Helen Beatrice JosephOMSG(néeFennell) (8 April 1905 – 25 December 1992) was a South African anti-apartheidactivist.[1]Born in Sussex, England, Helen graduated with a degree in English from theUniversity of Londonin 1927 and then departed for India, where she taught for three years at Mahbubia School for girls in Hyderabad. In about 1930 she left India for England via South Africa. However, she settled inDurban,where she met and married a dentist, Billie Joseph, whom she later divorced.[2]

Early life

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Helen Joseph was born Helen Beatrice May Fennell in 1905 inEasebournenearMidhurst,West Sussex,England,the daughter of a government Customs and Excise officer, Samuel Fennell.[3]Helen Joseph came from a middle-class white family.[4]She grew up in a racially prejudiced household.[5]

In 1923 Helen attended theUniversity of Londonto study English, graduating fromKing's College Londonin 1927. After teaching inIndiafor three years, she intended to return home viaSouth Africa.In the port city of Durban she became friendly with Dorothy Stubbs, a teacher atClifton School (Durban),whose father Harry Stubbs was headmaster. When Miss Stubbs left the school to get married, her father offered the vacant position to Helen Joseph. She taught at the school in 1930–1931.[6]In Durban she met and in 1931 married Billie Joseph, a Jewish dentist 17 years her senior.[7]She served in theWomen's Auxiliary Air ForceduringWorld War IIas an information and welfare officer. After the war, she divorced Billie Joseph. She trained as a social worker and started working in a community centre in aColoured(mixed-race) area of Cape Town.[8]

Later life

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In 1951 Helen first metSolly Sachswhen she applied for the job of Secretary-Director of the Medical Aid Society of the Transvaal Clothing Society. At the time, Sachs was the head of the Garment Workers' Union.[9]

Appalled by conditions for black South Africans, she fought side by side with activists to gain them greater rights, such as health care, freedom of speech, racial equality and women's rights.[10][11]She was a founder member of theCongress of Democrats,and one of the leaders who read out the clauses of theFreedom Charterat the Congress of the People inKliptownin 1955. Aghast at the plight of black women, she played a pivotal role, along withLillian Ngoyi,in the formation of theFederation of South African Women.With its leadership, she spearheaded aMarch of 20,000 womenon August 9, 1956, to theUnion BuildingsinPretoriato protest against thepass laws.This day is still celebrated as South Africa'sNational Women's Day.[8]

Treason trial and house arrest

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Joseph's opposition to the State had not gone unnoticed and she was a defendant at the 1956Treason Trial.Justice Rumpffstated, "On all the evidence presented to this court and on our findings of fact, it is impossible for this court to come to the conclusion that the African National Congress has acquired or adopted a policy to overthrow the state by violence, that is, in the sense that the masses had to be prepared or conditioned to commit direct acts of violence against the state."

However, Joseph was arrested on a charge ofhigh treasonin December 1956 as a result of her anti-apartheid activism. In 1957, Joseph was banned from publicly opposing the government through her speech and protests.[4]The treason trial dragged on for four years and she was acquitted in 1961. Joseph was one of six Jewish women on trial, the others beingRuth First,Yetta Barenblatt,Sonia Bunting,Dorothy Shanley, andJacqueline Arenstein.[12]While on trial for treason, Joseph learned that the government was forcing people out of the country and into remote areas if they were thought to have violated apartheid laws.[5]In 1962, Joseph found most of the banished people then reunited them with their families and gave them supplies.[5]In spite of her acquittal, Helen Joseph became on 13 October 1962 the first person placed under house arrest under theSabotage Actintroduced by theapartheidgovernment.[13]She narrowly escaped death more than once, surviving bullets shot through her bedroom and a bomb wired to her front gate. In May, 1971, she was briefly released from her house arrest inNorwood,aJohannesburgsuburb, so that she could receive cancer surgery at a hospital inJohannesburg.By then she had spent 3,145 consecutive days at home, despite never having been convicted of a crime,[14]Her final banning order was lifted in 1985 when she was 80 years old and had spent 23 years in confinement.[8]

In a submission to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Paul Erasmus, a secret service operative, stated that from about 1978 till late in the 1980s, he and his colleagues had on many occasions damaged the property of Mrs Joseph by throwing stones through the windows of her house, made telephone threats, fired shots at the house but did not intend to injure any person, ordered and caused unwanted supplies to be delivered to her house, and poured paint remover over her motor car, as well as a car belonging to Ann Hughes, when the latter visited her.

The apartheid state's fear of her was puzzling: "How a weary old girl, an ou tannie like me can be a threat to state security only they can say?" Joseph is quoted as saying.[15]From the late 1970s, Christmas Day was "Open Day" at Helen Joseph's house for those involved in the anti-apartheid struggle. All comrades brought food and at 12 noon everyone raised their glasses to those imprisoned on Robben Island. (Apparently the Robben Islanders were aware of the ritual.) On 25 December 1992, Joseph was in hospital and the venue moved to 11 Plantation Road, The Gardens. Robben Island's prisoners had been released, and those present raised their glasses to Helen, who died shortly after.[16][17]

Personal life

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Grave of Helen Joseph in theAvalon Cemetery

"On 31 December 1956, I moved into my little cottage with the tall trees, delighted to have a home of my own...." – Joseph was quoted as saying in 1986. Thecottagewas 35 Fanny Avenue, and moving into it in December 1956 was an act of faith and optimism, as Helen had been arrested just days before that, charged with treason, and faced trial for four years. It is tempting to speculate that Helen Joseph chose to live inNorwoodbecause two of her fellow comrades,Bram Fischerin Oaklands, and Violet Weinberg in The Gardens, lived nearby. Whatever the reason for her choice, she would conduct her struggle against injustice from this address until her death in 1992. During that period she was banned four times, jailed four times, and saw her life become a long saga of police persecution, much of it spent under house arrest.

Helen had no children of her own, but frequently stood in for the children of comrades in prison or in exile. She was viewed as a mother in the eyes of many activists, and for many years, they celebrated her onMother's Day.[10]Among the children who spent time in her care were the daughters ofWinnieandNelson Mandela's – Zinzi and Zenani – andBram Fischer's daughter, Ilsa.

Legacy and honours

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Helen Joseph died on 25 December 1992 at the age of 87,[18]having been admitted to theOrder of Simon of Cyrenein 1992, the highest honour theAnglican Church of Southern Africabestows on lay members providing outstanding service.[19]She was awarded theIsitwalandwe/Seaparankwe Medalby the ANC in the same year.

Clifton School (Durban)named a library after Helen Joseph, who taught there when she first came to South Africa. The library contains a specially commissioned portrait.[20]

Places named after Helen Joseph include former Davenport Road inGlenwood, KwaZulu-Natal,theHelen Joseph HospitalinJohannesburg,a student residence atRhodes University,Grahamstown,and roads in Rustenburg and Johannesburg.[21][22][23]

On April 8, 2021,Googlecelebrated her 116th birthday with aGoogle Doodle.[24]

Published works

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  • If This Be Treason.London: Andre Deutsch. 1963.ISBN978-0-620-22197-9.Helen Joseph's Dramatic Account of the Treason Trial, the Longest in South Africa's History and One of the Strangest Trials of the 20th Century
  • Tomorrow's Sun.New York:John Day Company.1967.A smuggled journal from South Africa
  • Side by Side: The Autobiography of Helen Joseph.New York: William Morrow & Co. 1986.ISBN978-0-688-07103-5.
  • Helen Joseph.Johannesburg: Maskew Miller Longman. 1995.ISBN978-0636022409.

See also

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Notes and references

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  1. ^Van Wyk 2003.
  2. ^"Obituary: Helen Joseph".Independent.co.uk.28 December 1992.Archivedfrom the original on 9 May 2022.
  3. ^Frederikse, Julie (January 1995).The Fought for Freedom: Helen Josephs.Cape Town: Maskew Millar Longman. p. 1.ISBN0636022404.
  4. ^abCowell, Alan (26 December 1992)."Helen Joseph Dies in South Africa; Early Foe of Apartheid Was 87".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.Retrieved24 April2020.
  5. ^abcCaine, Barbara (2008). "'A South African Revolutionary, but a Lady of the British Empire': Helen Joseph and the Anti-Apartheid Movement ".Journal of Southern African Studies.34(3): 575–590.doi:10.1080/03057070802259811.ISSN0305-7070.JSTOR40283169.S2CID144653818.
  6. ^"Welcome to Clifton Durban".Clifton School.
  7. ^Lazerson, Joshua (1994).Against the tide: whites in the struggle against apartheid.Westview Press. p. 106.ISBN0813384877.
  8. ^abcRappaport 2001,p. 344.
  9. ^Joseph, Helen (1986).Side by side.Johannesburg: AD. Donker Publishers. p. 249.ISBN0-86852-196-5.
  10. ^abHealy-Clancy, Meghan."The Family Politics of the Federation of South African Women: A History of Public Motherhood in Women's Antiracist Activism".Signs: Journal of Women in Culture & Society.42:843–866.doi:10.1086/690916.S2CID148886681.
  11. ^Giokos, Eleni (17 August 2016)."The four South African women who rattled the nation with anti-rape protest".CNN World.
  12. ^Weisse, Wolfram (2004).Religion, politics, and identity in a changing South Africa.Waxmann Munster. p. 47.ISBN9783830913283.
  13. ^Caine, Barbara (2008). "'A South African Revolutionary, but a Lady of the British Empire': Helen Joseph and the Anti-Apartheid Movement ".Journal of Southern African Studies.34(3): 575–590.doi:10.1080/03057070802259811.ISSN0305-7070.JSTOR40283169.S2CID144653818.
  14. ^"3,145-Day House Arrest Lifted by South Africans",The New York Times,May 24, 1971, p. 10.
  15. ^"Truth Commission – Special Report – DecisionsTRC Final Report – Volume, Section, Chapter".sabctrc.saha.org.za.
  16. ^Anonymous (17 February 2011)."Helen Joseph".www.sahistory.org.za.
  17. ^Anonymous (31 March 2011)."Treason Trial 1956-1961".www.sahistory.org.za.
  18. ^"Helen Joseph | South African History Online".www.sahistory.org.za.Retrieved29 May2020.
  19. ^"Historical Papers, Wits University".historicalpapers.wits.ac.za.Retrieved1 April2015.
  20. ^"Struggle legend, Helen Joseph honoured by Clifton School".bereamail.co.za.2 March 2020.
  21. ^"A Deeper Look at Johannesburg's New Street Names | The Heritage Portal".www.theheritageportal.co.za.Retrieved29 May2020.
  22. ^"Joburg CBD streets renamed".eNCA.Retrieved29 May2020.
  23. ^"Welcome to the Helen Joseph Residence! Also known as" The Oasis "".www.ru.ac.za.20 July 2011.Retrieved29 May2020.
  24. ^"Helen Joseph's 116th Birthday".Google.8 April 2021.
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