An MK commander discusses Joe Slovo: How the former MK commander, who died this month, once replied to the daughter of the SACP leader
In April and May 1996, an important discussion took place in the letters columns of the London Review of Books, in response to a review in the LRB by RW Johnson of the posthumous memoir by the late SACP leader, Joe Slovo, The Unfinished Autobiography (Ravan Press, Johannesburg, 1995/Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1996).
Important historical information was provided in the LRB by the late David Kitson, who died in Johannesburg on 9 November, aged 91, and who had served a 20-year sentence in Pretoria Local and Central prisons as a member of the second High Command of Umkhonto we Sizwe following the arrests at Lilliesleaf Farm in Rivonia in July 1963.
In the letter below, published in the LRB on 23 May 1996 , Kitson - then living with his wife Norma in Harare - provides firsthand information about Joe Slovo's departure from South Africa in 1963 before the Rivonia arrests, and about his and Norma's suspension from the ANC in London following his release from prison and arrival in Britain in 1984.
The suspensions of David and Norma Kitson followed Norma Kitson's refusal to dissolve the very successful non-stop picket on South Africa House in Trafalgar Square in London , calling for the release of Nelson Mandela and all South African political prisoners, and David Kitson's refusal to denounce his wife.
Stating that he and his wife had been "prevented from playing our part in the new South Africa" despite the urgings of Nelson Mandela and Walter Sisulu, Kitson's letter raises the question of the methodology of dealing with dissent of the leadership of the ANC in exile - even in the case of such a senior commander, who had spent 20 years in prison.