TRIBUTE TO THE LATE MRS HELEN SUZMAN BY PRINCE MANGOSUTHU
BUTHELEZI MP
It was with great sadness that I heard that my dear friend Helen Suzman passed away earlier today.
The many tributes to Helen will record that she was one of the many people who were madly pulling at the ropes of apartheid inside and outside of South Africa. Like so many others, she has not been given the recognition she deserves. I hope that in the hour of her passing this will begin to be rectified. She is, without doubt, one of the unsung heroines of the struggle.
Mrs Suzman tirelessly used her position to break the apartheid mould in a profoundly undemocratic whites-only parliament. She demonstrated raw courage in curbing some of the worst excesses of the apartheid government with her forensic parliamentary skills and relentless badgering of National Party politicians to, occasionally, do the right thing.
She also gave me unstinting encouragement when dallying with black politicians was not the smartest thing to do. On one occasion in the 1960's, after attending a Progressive Federal Party seminar, my brother-in-law, Dr Dotwana and I were stopped in our car at a roadblock in Germiston. One of the policemen spotted a leaflet on the backseat of the car containing pictures of Helen Suzman and Dr Verwoerd with a scathing attack on the Prime Minister. I was arrested and driven to the office of the Security Police in Germiston. In the meantime someone had been in contact with Mrs Suzman who promptly called the police, demanding that I be released immediately, which I was. In 1976, Helen pleaded with me not to go Soweto during the riots because she feared for my safety.
My wife and I will always be grateful for the hospitality that Helen and her late husband Mosie gave to us at a time when it was virtually unheard of for Africans to stay in the homes of white people.