The speech by Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi at the launch of a book about the late Chief Albert Luthuli on the 27th November (see here) revived so many memories of my youth that I feel I should share them with people interested in the history of the ANC.
Prince Buthelezi tells us something about his uncle, Prince Mshiyeni ka Dinizulu and about meetings held at the prince's residence, KwaSokesimbone. Well by a strange turn of fate I was also at that residence one day in 1939. It happened like this: My late father who had fought against the British in the Second Anglo-Boer War, and who had never been in a High School, much less a university, had an illegal medical practice on our little farm near the Nqutu Zulu Reserve.
When the police at Nondweni started to take an interest he wanted to give the thing up, but his Zulu patients advised him to visit the Regent of the Zulu Nation, prince Mshiyeni, and to ask that very important man for his assistance. An appointment was made for him to see the prince and on the appointed day I, then 11 years old, accompanied him to the chief's residence.
When we arrived there my father was ushered into the presence of the chief, who listened to his problem and ordered his secretary to type a letter to the Magistrate at Vryheid in which he told that gentleman that my father was a friend of the Zulu nation and should be assisted.
While my father was in the chief's presence I was made to wait outside in the car. A Zulu boy, about my own age, brought me a glass containing a cold drink. (Perhaps this was Mangosuthu !). The letter signed by the prince, when presented to the Magistrate, induced that official to issue my father upon payment of five shillings, with a licence to sell patent and Dutch medicines, which effectively legalised his practice !
Prince Buthelezi tells us about Mr. A.W.G. Champion, the man who was president of the ANC in Natal until 1951. I never met him, but I knew all about him. When I was transferred to the Special Branch in Durban in January 1952 the first thing I learnt was that complete "history reports" on all "agitators" were an absolute necessity. These reports required the full names of the agitators.