Lillian Ngoyi known as "mother of the Black resistance" in South Africa. |
Lillian Masediba Ngoyi, (b. 9/25/11 - d. 3/13/1980) was 69 when she died of heart failure in her two-room
house in Mzimhlophe, a section of Soweto. She had been banned under
South Africa's apartheid laws for 15 years when her obituary appeared in
the newspaper. The obituary was the first time her name would legally
be allowed in print as the apartheid ban meant that no one could print
anything about Lillian or quote her publicly without being in violation
of the banning law against her in South Africa at the time.
Lillian
Ngoyi is remembered. She was one of six children born in Pretoria. Her
father was a mine-worker and her mother supplemented their household
income by laundering clothes. Her family was close relatives of Chief
Phatudi of the Lebowa homeland. Es'kia Mphahlele, the celebrated
African author who wrote Down Second Avenue, was also named among her
kin. Models of leadership were present in her family.
Lillian
began community organizing early. She became active in the Garment
Workers Union when she worked as a machinist in a clothing factory for
ten years. By 1956, she was the national president of both the
Federation of African Women (FAW) and the African National Congress
Women's League (ANCWL), a branch of the African National Congress. As president of the women's league, she is often noted as the first woman elected to an executive committee of the ANC.
Lillian as machinist in clothing factory. |
Soon,
we find Lillian in Johannesburg where she and her enlisted friends go
into a "Whites Only" section of the Rissik Street Post Office. They
were immediately told to move to the non-white section. They refused. In fact, they
had to refuse. The "Whites Only" section was the only section that
allowed for sending a telegram to the prime minister. Their goal was to
send a telegram to the prime minister. They were soon arrested by police for resisting. Once outside the post office,
they were met by a cheering crowd. After five court appearances, the charges were dropped. As
the president of FAW and ANCWL, however, Lillian was under the constant eye of the
policing authorities in South Africa.
By 1966, Lillian Ngoyi was elected, together
with Dora Tamana of Cape Town, to represent the FAW at a conference of
the Womens' International Democratic Federation in Switzerland. Both of
the ladies knew they would never receive exit visas from the South African government. A lack of visa would not stop them. They were captured
as stow away on a ship headed to Cape Town to catch a plane that would
take them to Switzerland. After being released by the police, they
traveled to Johannesburg and received the help of Nelson Mandela and
Oliver Tambo to board a plane to England.
Lillian Ngoyi, first woman elected to an ANC executive committee. |
They did not make it directly to Switzerland. Instead, Lillian spent two months speaking in England to large groups about the apartheid pass laws and the Bantu Education Act, with reports of audiences being brought to tears. She went on to Germany and was greeted with grand displays of flower bouquets. Her final stop was in Switzerland for the World Conference. She was soon invited to Russia and accepted. She went on to China. Though she knew the punishment awaiting her in South Africa, she loved her country so much that she returned. When arriving at the Jan Smuts Airport in South Africa she kissed the ground of her homeland, happy to be back on African soil.
The South African government silenced her. She
was not allowed to publish written communication nor to address a
crowd. She lived under a banning order, with only a few among the
younger generations knowing the sacrifices she made. This was not the age where a Google.com search would give you information at your finger tips. While many of the
men of the anti-apartheid movement are known, there were a number of
women like Lillian Ngoyi whose efforts led the way to the end of legal
apartheid in South Africa. Let us not forget her courageous works.
MARGRET MACHUBATLHAGA MOSHOBANE ALSO DIED FOR DEMOCRACY IN 1994 BUT HER DEATH NEVER BEEN PUBLISHED AND HER CHILDREN NEVER BEEN REWARDED THEY SUFFERING TILL TODAY SAD HEY
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