A Tribute to Colin Eglin - by Peter Soal
Colin Eglin was a founder Trustee and one of the initiators of the Helen Suzman Foundation. During planning for the 1994 election with Colin, Zach de Beer, James Selfe, me and others, it was suggested that a Foundation be established as a vehicle for raising money abroad. The intention was that it would revert to a research organisation after the election, a task it has fulfilled admirably. We agreed on its establishment and I was sent off to seek Helen's permission, which authority she readily gave.
Colin remained involved with the Foundation until recently when he retired as trustee. He was then made a Trustee Emeritus. This pleased him as he and Helen had a strong mutual regard and fondness for each other. It was Patty Suzman who wrote recently that Helen regarded Colin with great admiration - a high accolade as the list of those she admired wasn't very long!
Colin was born on 14 April 1925 into a modest Methodist family living in the first South African garden city of Pinelands. His father died when he was 9 and he was sent to live with an aunt and uncle who farmed near Hobhouse in the Eastern Free State. There he attended a mainly Afrikaans medium school and gained insight not only into the language but the psyche of the people. This stood him in good stead in the years to come when, as leader of the Party, he launched his ‘Modern City Afrikaner' programme which was to produce, amongst others, Van Zyl Slabbert.
Following Hobhouse he attended the de Villiers Graaff High School at Villiersdorp where he matriculated at 14. At this tender age he registered at UCT for a Bachelor of Science degree in Quantity Surveying. War had been declared a few months earlier and Colin watched developments with great interest. It is romantic but incorrect to claim that Colin faked his age to go to war. In his memoirs he makes it clear that when he turned 18 in 1943 he came to an arrangement with his Professor that he would enlist and return after the war to complete his degree.
Now followed one of the most formative periods of his life. It included the battle of Mount Solé on his 20th birthday, a few weeks before the end of the war, an event which made an indelible impression on his soul. It was during these years that his commitment to democracy and liberty deepened. Mount Solé was a shrine for him as he returned there on many occasions during the next sixty eight years to stand gazing at the mountain where, as a young man, he became an adult. Colin's last trip to Mount Solé was just a few months ago.