By Sohaila Kapur
The long
walk to freedom is over. But Fatima Meer is not tired yet. Fatima Meer is one of
South Africa’s best-known social activists. Having inherited her radical
politics from Mahatma Gandhi himself before he returned to India, she has
resisted racism in South Africa, in the same way that Gandhiji did—through
passive resistance. She was the only woman awardee at the Pravasi Bharatiya
Divas recently held in Delhi to honour the achievements of members of the Indian
diaspora abroad.
The Struggle
It began early in life. The racial segregation practised by the
minority, white regime humiliated her. “There were separate ‘non
European’ seats marked out in public places for Indians and Blacks,”
she says, “and I felt the need to protest.” So, while still in high
school, her campaign against racism began, with several others. It was during
their third campaign, in 1946, that the Africans too were spurred into activity,
leading to the fourth passive resistance, under the aegis of Nelson
Mandela’s ANC party.
Citizen’s
Forum
That’s Meer’s own NGO, which works within the
Indian and African communities, attempting to help poverty-stricken South
African townships, combating problems of alcoholism, and wife and child abuse in
both communities. “The problems among the Indian community, however, are
not so severe,” says Meer as she explains that the Indian family is far
more integrated than the African family.
“This is because most
South African families are migrant farm labourers, and the men are away from
their families, leaving the women and children to fend for themselves. This rips
the family apart and in many cases, the children take to crime.” Besides,
she adds, several Indian women’s organisations in SA help their
compatriots to be more politically and socially aware.
Not Just A Social
Activist
Meer has co-authored ‘the first authorised
biography’ of Nelson Mandela, called ‘Higher Than Hope’, with
Mandela’s estranged wife, Winnie, who was part of his life for many years.
The book was written when they were in jail together during the passive
resistance of 1976. “In fact, it was written even before Mandela published
his autobiography, ‘Long Walk To Freedom’,” she says. Meer has
also written the first script of Shyam Benegal’s feature on Mahatma
Gandhi, which was based on her own book, ‘The Apprenticeship of A
Mahatma.’
The Story
Today
Five years ago, Meer underwent bypass surgery and just about
five months ago, she suffered a stroke, which has left her confined to a wheel
chair. But that has not deterred this determined grandmother of five. She still
works hard at her social service activities and pursues her fulltime job as a
lecturer in sociology at the University of Natal in Durban. A fruitful journey,
indeed!