Ic meer
Ic meer | |
---|---|
Член законодательного органа Kwazulu-Natal | |
В офисе Май 1994 - 1 мая 2000 г. | |
Личные данные | |
Рожденный | Исмаил Чота Миер 5 сентября 1918 г. Washbank , Натальная провинция Союз Южной Африки |
Умер | 1 мая 2000 г. Дурбан, Квазулу-Натал Республика Южная Африка | (в возрасте 81 года)
Политическая партия | Африканский национальный конгресс |
Другие политические принадлежность | Южноафриканский индейский конгресс Коммунистическая партия Южной Африки |
Супруг | |
Children | 3, including Shehnaz Meer |
Alma mater | University of Natal University of the Witwatersrand |
Исмаил Чота Меер Олс (5 сентября 1918 г.-1 мая 2000 г.), иногда написанный Исмаэль Миер , был южноафриканским адвокатом, писателем и активистом против апартеида . Он был секретарем индийского конгресса Трансваала во время президентства Юсуфа Даду , а позже он занимал лидерские должности на Натальском индийском конгрессе и южноафриканском индийском конгрессе . После окончания апартеида он представлял Африканский национальный конгресс в законодательном органе Квазулу-Натал с мая 1994 года до своей смерти в мае 2000 года.
Ранняя жизнь и образование
[ редактировать ]Меер родился 5 сентября 1918 года в Уэшбанке , небольшом городке в северной провинции Натал (ныне Kwazulu-Natal ). [ 1 ] Его отец, Чота Миер, мигрировал из Сурата, Индия , в Натал в 1893 году, открыв универсальный магазин под названием CA Meer в соседнем Данди . [ 2 ] Он был подростком, когда бизнес его отца рухнул во время Великой депрессии , и он переехал в городской центр Дурбана, чтобы найти работу. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Он поступил в 1939 году в колледже Састри в Береа, Дурбан . [ 1 ]
After high school, Meer completed a BA degree at the University of Natal, where he was president of the student representative council.[4] Thereafter he moved to Johannesburg to study law at the University of the Witwatersrand.[2] He graduated in 1946 and went on to qualify as an attorney;[1] for many years from 1951, he ran a legal practice in Verulam, Natal.[2][4]
Political activism
[edit]Having joined the Non-European United Front in high school,[4] Meer became increasingly involved in politics as a university student. While at the University of Natal, he was particularly involved in trade union organising, becoming a co-founder and secretary of the Natal Teachers' Union while still a student.[2][3] In Johannesburg, he was a member of the Communist Party of South Africa, the left-wing Liberal Study Group, and the Transvaal Indian Congress (TIC).[2] His Johannesburg home, Flat 13 at Kholvad House in Market Street, became a meeting place for his politically active classmates;[2] Nelson Mandela later described as "a kind of headquarters for young freedom fighters".[5] In Flat 13 he also became a political mentor to Ahmed Kathrada, who said in his memoirs that Meer was, "more than an individual – he was an institution".[6] His own political influences included Jawaharlal Nehru and Clements Kadalie.[3]
In 1946, Meer was elected to take office as secretary of the TIC, serving under newly elected TIC president Yusuf Dadoo.[2] Under Dadoo's leadership, the TIC launched its campaign of passive resistance to the Ghetto Act, as well as its gradual embrace of the African National Congress (ANC) and other non-Indian political organisations; Meer was regarded as an instrumental figure in both respects.[2][3] He also contributed to various progressive publications – including through a regular column titled I Remember in the Leader newspaper – and he was editor of the Passive Resister, a Johannesburg-based publication that reported on developments in the two-year-long Ghetto Act campaign.[2][3]
In the 1950s, while practising as a lawyer in Verulam, Meer remained politically active in the anti-apartheid movement. In 1952, he was on the executive committee of the Defiance Campaign, and on 29 November that year he led one of the campaign's civil disobedience events; he was arrested and imprisoned for a month with hard labour.[2] He went on to serve stints as vice-president of the Natal Indian Congress and president of the Natal branch of the South African Congress of Trade Unions.[1] He and his wife were both subjected to banning orders in 1954, and – after being arrested while recovering from an appendectomy – he was among the 156 activists charged with treason in the 1956 Treason Trial.[2] Although he was acquitted of treason, he was detained again during the 1960 state of emergency.[3] As a result of state banning orders, it was illegal to quote or print Meer's words between 1952 and 1990, though he continued to write under a pseudonym.[4]
Post-apartheid political career
[edit]The ANC was unbanned in 1990 during the negotiations to end apartheid, and Meer was elected as chairperson of the party's local branch in Durban West.[4] He stood as an ANC candidate in the first post-apartheid elections in April 1994 and was elected to a seat in the KwaZulu-Natal Legislature. He retained his seat after the June 1999 general election.[4] During this period, he also established the Liberation History Foundation, which promoted historical research and education about neglected aspects of the anti-apartheid struggle.[4]
While still serving as a legislator, Meer died in his sleep on 1 May 2000 at his home in Clare Estate, Durban.[7][8] In April 2011,[9] President Jacob Zuma admitted him posthumously to the Order of Luthuli, granting him the award in silver for "His excellent contribution to a non-racial and democratic South Africa, struggle for liberation, workers rights and for the formation of the Natal Teachers' Union."[3]
Personal life
[edit]In March 1951,[10] he married Fatima Meer, who was his father's grand-niece.[2] Their son, Rashid, died in a car accident in 1995. They also had two daughters, Shamim and Shehnaz.[2] Meer was Muslim; he frequently delivered the jumu'ah khutbah and taught tafsir at his mosque, and he performed hajj with his wife in 1984.[2]
After Meer's death, his family edited and published his autobiography, A Fortunate Man, which was printed in 2002 with a foreword by Nelson Mandela.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Ismail Chota Meer". South African History Online. 17 February 2011. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Vahed, Goolam H. (2012). Muslim portraits: the anti-apartheid struggle. Durban, South Africa. pp. 222–246. ISBN 978-1-874945-25-3. OCLC 858966865.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g "Ismael Chota Meer (1918 – )". The Presidency. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Bhamjee, Yusuf (2000). "Obituaries: Ismael Meer (1918–2000)" (PDF). Natalia. 30: 64–65.
- ^ Мандела, Нельсон (1994). Длинная прогулка к свободе: автобиография Нельсона Манделы . Маленький, коричневый. п. 105. ISBN 978-0-7595-2104-9 .
- ^ Катрада, Ахмад М. (2004). Мемуары . Зебра Пресс. ISBN 978-1-86872-918-0 .
- ^ «Политический активист Исмаил Меер умирает» . Иол . 1 мая 2000 года . Получено 24 июня 2024 года .
- ^ «Прощай, Измаил Меер, настоящий слуга людей» . Sowetan . 5 мая 2000 года . Получено 24 июня 2024 года - через Allafrica.
- ^ «Боссы чемпионата мира почитались» . Sunday Times . 26 апреля 2011 года . Получено 24 июня 2024 года .
- ^ Четти, Дасарат (2008). Фатима Миер: графическая дань (pdf ) Университет Квазулу-Натала. П. 6. ISBN 978-0620-42034-1 .
- ^ Бхана, Сурендра (2003). «Обзор Уолтера и Альбертины Сисулу: в нашей жизни; удачный человек: Исмаил Миер» . Международный журнал африканских исторических исследований . 36 (3): 695–697. doi : 10.2307/3559461 . ISSN 0361-7882 . JSTOR 3559461 .
Внешние ссылки
[ редактировать ]- Я помню - собраны колонны Мира (1924–1958)
- Первое интервью с доном Пинноком (1990)
- Второе интервью с Дон Пинноком (1990)
- 1918 Рождения
- 2000 смертей
- Южноафриканские адвокаты 20-го века
- Южноафриканские писатели 20-го века
- Южноафриканские политики 20-го века
- Южноафриканские писатели 20-го века
- Политики африканского национального конгресса
- Натальный индийский конгресс политики
- Люди оправданы в измене
- Члены законодательного органа Kwazulu-Natal
- Члены Ордена Лутули
- Члены Коммунистической партии Южной Африки
- Мусульманские южноафриканские активисты против апартеида
- Люди из местного муниципалитета эндомени
- Политики из Квазулу-Натала
- Южноафриканский народ Гуджаратского происхождения
- Южноафриканские профсоюзные активисты
- Университет Университета Университета Витватерсранда
- Выпускники университета Натала