Fatima Meer - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.
Fatima Meer (1928 - ) was born in Grey Street,
Durban. Her
father, Moosa Meer was
the editor of Indian Views, a weekly newspaper
aimed at
Gujarati-speaking Muslim communities. Fatima was brought
up in an atmosphere
that was highly conscious of racial discrimination and
that shaped her into
a tireless defender of the oppressed. She attended the
Durban Indian Girls'
High School and subsequently went to the University of
Natal where she
completed a Masters degree in Sociology.
From 1946 to 1948, Indians in South Africa engaged in the
Passive Resistance
campaign against apartheid. Meer, who joined the campaign,
established the
Student Passive Resistance Committee, where she embarked
on a career as an
anti-apartheid campaigner. She helped establish the Durban
districts Women's
League to build alliances between Africans and Indians,
after the
race riots that occurred between the two groups in 1949.
The organisation
built a creche, distributed milk and fought the arrests of
African women
with passes.
When the National Party came to power in 1948, imposing
the policy of
apartheid, Meer's involvement increased and she spoke
publicly against
apartheid. Her activities led to her banning in 1952,
which excluded her
from all public gatherings and from being published. She
became a founding
member of the Federation of South African Women (FEDSAW)
that spearheaded
the historical women's march to the Union Buildings that
occurred on the 9th
of August 1956.
During the 1960s, when the majority of activists were
being detained without
trial, she organised night vigils and in the 1970s when
the Black
Consciousness Movement was starting to dominate, she was
again banned and
was subsequently detained for trying to organise a rally
with Steve Biko.
Shortly after her release in 1976, Meer survived an
assassination attempt,
when her house was petrol bombed. Her son Rashid was
forced into exile in
the same year, making this a difficult time for her, as
she was not to
see him for a decade.
From the 1980s to the 1990s, Meer worked with NGOs,
fighting for the
rights of shack-dwellers and rural migrants. She headed
the Natal Education
Trust, which built schools in Umlazi, Port Shepstone and
Inanda; established
the Tembalihle Tutorial College in Phoenix and a Crafts
Center. These
projects were shut down in 1982 when Fatima was detained
for contravening a
banning order. Fatima established a string of educational
institutions that
were aimed at improving the quality of education for
Africans.
She has published more than forty books on a wide variety
of subjects. Her
major publications include: Portrait of Indian South
Africans;
Apprenticeship of a Mahatma; Race and Suicide in
South Africa;
Documents of
Indentured Labour; Higher than Hope; The
South African Gandhi;
Resistance in
the Townships; Apartheid our Picture; and
Passive Resistance amongst others.
Fatima Meer as also won numerous awards for her
activities, to name a
few: Union of South African Journalists in 1975; Imam
Abdullah Haroon Award
for the Struggle against Oppression and Racial
Discrimination in 1990;
Vishwa Gurjari Award for Contribution to Human Rights in
1994 and 'Top 100
Women Who Shook South Africa' in 1999.
Fatima Meer continues with her work with non-governmental
bodies, however she has
since democracy in 1994
served in a number of advisory positions for the
government. She is also a
member of Jubilee 2000, that was formed to get the Third
World Debt
cancelled. The past few years have been difficult for
Fatima, who has
lost both her husband (Ismael) and son (Rashid). She has
also suffered
several heart attacks, yet she remains a fighter and a
champion of the under
classes.
zoom
 Grey Street (from the SA History site)
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Selected WorkFrom Apprenticeship of a Mahatma - A Biography of
M.K. Gandhi 1869-1914 (1970)
When Mohan reached Durban in
1893, he was 24 years old. Seth Dada Abdulla, his host,
client and
employer, met him at the docks. The elegance of the young
gentleman put
him off considerably and he secretly wondered what he
would do with him.
Mohan had expected to find the same reception in Durban as
in England
since Natal was a British colony. He was thus shocked when
he observed
the supercilious air of the petty officials towards the
Seth, whom he
knew to be one of the wealthiest men in the colony.
Customs formalities
completed, they entered the city. Mohan had the feeling of
being pursued
by a silent hostility. The silence broke when he entered
the local
court. The presiding magistrate ordered Mohan to take off
his turban.
Mohan was shocked. A turban was not a hat; it covered the
head as a mark
of personal prestige and public respect. Humiliated and
angry, the two
men hurried out of the room, and it was then that Mohan
learnt of White
prejudices.
He wondered whether he should abandon wearing the turban,
rather than
having it subjected to further insults, but the Seth liked
his young
charge in a turban. Besides, he argued, never before had
so educated an
Indian entered the colony, and he reasoned that on that
ground alone
Mohan should not succumb to the unjustified and
humiliating demands of
the insensitive Whites. Mohan liked the Seth's attitude,
and so he not
only retained his turban, but in addition wrote a letter
to the daily
paper, protesting against his treatment in court. He
thereby, quite
unwittingly, stepped into the politics of racial
discrimination and
released a voice of protest which, - in the years to come,
would become
increasingly more sophisticated. His brush with the colour
bar certainly
did not end there.
Almost as if by design, Mohan was exposed to a further
series of racial
assaults within the succeeding few days when he set out
for Pretoria to
work with Dada Abdulla's lawyers on the Seth's R80,000
claim against his
cousin, a Pretoria businessman.
He began the journey in a first class compartment. His
companion,
preoccupied with his newspaper, remained apparently
unaware of his
presence until they approached Pietermaritzburg. Then he
suddenly
baulked at the prospect of having to spend
the night with a black man, and summoned the officials.
They appeared
and the chief among them ordered Mohan to the goods van.
Mohan refused
to obey, whereupon a constable was summoned at
Pietermaritzburg and he
was pushed out of his compartment and left stranded on the
platform
while the train moved on.
He sat in the cold on the bench, overcome by his
humiliation and barely
able to contain his anger. He did not know where his
luggage was, and he
did not have the courage to enquire lest further
humiliation would
follow. His first reaction was to flee the country and he
debated the
matter deep into the night, working out the grounds on
which he would
ask Dada Abdulla to release him from his contract; but
with dawn came a
new resolution. To run away would be cowardly. He should
stay and fight
this thing that made petty officials act in such a
high-handed manner
towards respected citizens. He realized that what had
happened to him
was no chance event, but the studied application of an
attitude which
had taken possession of the local White mind. He
considered that
attitude evil and contrary to every British tradition he
had learned to
respect, and hence, in fact, alien to the English who
practised it. He
decided to stay and fight. Bibliography1969. Portrait Of Indian South Africans.
1970. Apprenticeship Of A Mahatma.
1975. Black Women Durban 1975 : Case Studies On 85
Women At Home And
Work.
1976. Race And Suicide In South Africa.
1984. Factory And Family : The Divided Lives Of South
Africa's Women
Workers.
1985. Unrest In Natal.
1987. The Trial Of Andrew Zondo : A Sociological
Insight.
1988. Higher Than Hope : "Rolihlahla We Love
You" : Nelson Mandela's
Biography On His 70th Birthday.
1989. Resistance In The Townships (edited By
Fatima Meer).
1989. Treason Trial, 1985.
1990. Mandela : Higher Than Hope : The Biography Of
Nelson Mandela.
1991. Black - Woman - Worker (With
Sayo Skweyiya et al).
1991. Monty Speaks : Speeches Of Dr. G.M. (Monty)
Naicker, 1945-1963.
1993. The CODESA File : An Institute For Black Research
Project.
2001. Prison Diary : One Hundred And Thirteen Days,
1976.
(n.d.) The Ghetto People : A Study Of The Effects Of
Uprooting The
Indian People Of South Africa.
(n.d.) Power Of The Powerless : A Study Of South
Africa's
Disenfranchised : Their Organisational Affiliations And
Access To Power
Based On A Sample Study Of 3316 Disenfranchised South
Africans. - Durban -
- Index -
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