Mum and Dad first ran into each other in the summer of 1966. She was a girl called Christine Jane Emery, a former pupil of St Paul’s school in London and the daughter of a City gentleman who had a large say in the world’s copper. He was a journalist, working for the Evening Post, the fiercest anti-government newspaper in the country.
She was also secretary of the Defence and Aid Fund, which supplied cash for the defence of political prisoners in South Africa.
So this seemed to both parties like a reasonable match.
My mother would return from work and tell my father all about her day, and the next day he would pass the message on exclusively to the readership of the Evening Post.
By the time he had promised not to write about her anymore, it was too late. The Defence and Aid Fund had become too successful, foreign contributions allowed it to hire the top lawyers in the country and the top lawyers were getting too many non-whites acquitted.
These were good deeds, indeed, and in South Africa no good deeds went unpunished. The organisation was banned and BOSS – the Bureau of State Security – moved in.
A week later Garth received a tip off that BOSS were going to arrest Christine under the 90 Days Legislation and had evidence that could keep her in jail for up to 5 years, which was plenty long enough. He immediately dispatched her to London.
Sure enough, Boss agents called at four o’clock the next morning. They didn’t knock on the door of the flat in those days. ‘Where is Christine?’ they said.
‘Oh, her mother has taken ill and she had to fly home.’
A few looks convinced my Dad he should leave, too, and he flew to London to work for Reuters, who wanted to send him to Vietnam. Just before he was due to leave the then Anglo American asked him to help start a national newspaper in Zambia and train African sub-editors. They offered him a lot more money than he would have got in Saigon. And, anyway, the guy who went to Vietnam in his place was killed within a week of arriving - on an official assignment with other journalists. Lucky for him. Lucky for me, too.
They loved the country and lost no time in meeting anti-South African government groups and attending meeting after meeting. One day she complained: ‘You know I wasn’t paid for those last few weeks at the Defence and Aid Fund.’
‘You should write to Mr Vorster (the former Minister of Justice) and demand your money,’
She did and amazingly enough was sent a cheque drawn on the official government bank, the South African Reserve Bank.
That night she attended another meeting in Kitwe. But she opened her bag and the cheque fell out, on to the table. The others at the meeting looked at the cheque and then at her with their mouths open.
She was in tears when she got back. ‘They think I am a spy for BOSS,’ she said. They ostracised her from that moment on. Dad tried to talk to them, but they wouldn’t budge. I guess they were scared too.
Mum found other interests and other friends but years later, before she became extremely ill, she said she often wondered if the African National Congress had been falsely told she was once a spy for the Afrikaner government.
‘I don’t really care,’ she said, ‘but I would hate Nelson Mandela thinking I wasn’t on his side.’ She died, without ever knowing the answer.
That's very interesting. Really. Garth told me the entire story in dribs and drabs over a few years, but reading it all on a single page was way more entertaining! Your parents were rebels in their day!
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