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Harold Strachan

Robert Harold Lundie "Jock" Strachan (1 December 1925 – 7 February 2020) was a white South African writer and anti-apartheid activist. He flew for the South African Air Force during the Second World War, trained as an artist, then became Umkhonto we Sizwe's first explosives expert. He was imprisoned for sabotage, and after his release served another sentence for telling a journalist about poor prison conditions. He wrote two semi-autobiographical books, and completed the Comrades Marathon twice, winning a medal once. He married twice and had three children.

Harold Strachan
A still from an interview with Strachan in 2010
MK Chief of Explosives
In office
1961–1963
Preceded byoffice established
Succeeded byvacant
Personal details
Born
Robert Harold Lundie Strachan[1]

(1925-12-01)1 December 1925
Pretoria, South Africa
Died7 February 2020(2020-02-07) (aged 94)
Spouses
Occupation
  • Artist
  • Anti-apartheid activist
  • Writer
Military career
AllegianceSouth Africa
Service/branch
Years of service1943-1946
RankLieutenant (SAAF)

Early life, art and running

Harold Strachan was born in Pretoria on 1 December 1925.[2][3] His father had been a metalworker in the Clyde shipyards who had emigrated from Scotland to South Africa in 1902,[2][4] and his mother was a teacher from an Afrikaner family.[nb 1][7] When Harold was three his mother left his father for another Scotsman, Jimmy Brown.[2] Brown died in 1931 from the effects of poison gas in the First World War, and his mother moved with Harold and his two sisters to Pietermaritzburg in Natal.[8] He attended Merchiston Preparatory School then Maritzburg College,[9] where he began to develop his political consciousness.[10]

 
A Harvard of the SAAF

Strachan joined the South African Air Force straight from school, and served as a pilot towards the end of the Second World War[11] with the rank of lieutenant.[12] He trained on the Tiger Moth and did advanced training on the Airspeed Oxford.[13] From 1946 to 1949 he studied for a Fine Arts degree at Natal University College in Pietermaritzburg.[2][10] In 1948 the ruling National Party introduced apartheid, a system of institutionalised racial segregation and discrimination against the black majority.[14] In 1949 Strachan completed the Comrades Marathon, an 89-kilometre (55 mi) ultramarathon run between Pietermaritzburg and Durban.[15] For a period after he left the air force, as a reservist he used to enjoy spending a month of each year flying the Harvard to keep his proficiency.[16]

In 1950 Strachan won a scholarship to study at the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts in London,[3] and married fellow South African Jean Middleton.[2][17] In 1951 he took a course in painting restoration at the State Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart.[2] In 1952 he returned to London and worked as a security guard, and in 1953 he managed his brother-in-law's painting and decorating business in Chingola in Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia), where he encouraged the black workers to unionise.[2] During the 1950s he worked with the artist Selby Mvusi.[3][18] Before he ran the 1954 Comrades Marathon, Strachan is supposed to have prepared for the race by drinking gin and vermouth with his wife.[19] He finished sixth in 7 h 48 min and earned a gold medal.[15][20][21] He was friendly with the English satirist Tom Sharpe until they fell out over a woman.[22] Strachan worked as a lecturer and teacher from 1955 to 1960.[10][23] He was divorced from Middleton in 1958.[2]

Activism, sabotage and imprisonment

Strachan's opposition to apartheid arose from his personal ethics, rather than ideology.[24] He became a founder member of the Liberal Party of South Africa in 1954, along with Alan Paton and Peter Brown,[25] and in 1957 joined the Congress of Democrats.[26][27] In 1959 he married Maggie von Lier, his former student.[28] In 1960, during the protests after the Sharpeville massacre, he and Maggie stood between armed police and black protesters, preventing the police from firing.[nb 2][27] A warrant was issued for their arrest, and to avoid it they fled to Swaziland.[nb 3][31] Three months later they returned to South Africa, Harold under the name Robert "Jock" Lundie,[31] and settled in Port Elizabeth where Harold worked with Govan Mbeki, and helped him produce and distribute the newsletter Izwe Lomzi ("Voice of the People").[nb 4][3][33] In 1961 he joined the illegal South African Communist Party (SACP), and edited their newspaper New Age.[11][34] He accepted Mbeki's request to improvise explosive devices for the newly-formed Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK),[nb 5] and experimented with substances such as nitric acid, potassium permanganate, magnesium, glycerol and icing sugar.[36][37][38]

...this was our job – devices and explosives. So I said, for God's sake, why me? And they said, no well, you were a bomber pilot in the war, you see, so you must know how to make bombs. I said, but for Christ's sake, Govan, we didn't make our own bombs. And they said, but you know about those things and I said, no, bombs were made in bloody factories, I don't know. So he said, anyway, you’re appointed. We did a good job, actually.

— Strachan, quoted by Zoë Molver[39]
 
Govan Mbeki under arrest in 1963

Strachan, who was MK's first explosives expert,[40] designed a simple incendiary device based on petrol and initiated by glycerol filtering through beach sand onto potassium permanganate. He later researched and created an explosive device based on a form of ammonal,[41] inspired by his reading of Robert Graves.[42] He trained other operatives, who then disseminated the expertise through a clandestine cell system.[43] His home-made bombs were planted at strategic infrastructure targets like electrical substations and railway lines.[44] As far as is known, there were no deaths in these attacks.[45]

He was caught when one of his trainees planted an improperly constructed incendiary device in the magistrate's court in Butterworth. It failed to go off, was discovered, and the operative was traced by fingerprint evidence. When tortured by the police he revealed Strachan's address.[46] Strachan was arrested at gunpoint and tried under the Explosives Act. He was found guilty of sabotage on 8 May 1962, and sentenced to six years' imprisonment, with three years suspended.[nb 6][48][49] He served thirteen months of his sentence in solitary confinement in Pretoria Central Prison, and had his teeth removed.[27][39][50] He passed the time in solitary constructing a Tiger Moth in his imagination then preparing an aerobatics routine for it.[51][52] When Strachan was named as a conspirator in the Rivonia Trial in 1963–64,[53] he refused to give evidence against Mbeki and Denis Goldberg, even when he was threatened with hanging.[54] Most of the accused at Rivonia (including Nelson Mandela) got life imprisonment as the law had been strengthened after Strachan's trial.[50] On 31 March 1965 Strachan faced a further trial for other bomb attacks but was found not guilty. He was released in May.[1]

On his release, he gave an account of his life in prison to the journalist Benjamin Pogrund,[55] who used it to write an article critical of the conditions under which prisoners were kept, which included frequent assaults and poor sanitary conditions. When the story was published in the Rand Daily Mail, in late June and early July 1965,[1] the government invoked the Prisons Act.[27][50] In the subsequent court case, a fellow saboteur gave evidence contradicting Strachan's allegations, and in May 1966 Strachan was imprisoned for 2+12 years.[nb 7][40] This was reduced to 1+12 on appeal,[50][56] then to one year via an amnesty.[40] During his second incarceration he was not allowed to read or study; he helped raise the morale of fellow political prisoners by designing props and costumes for amateur dramatics.[39][57] Strachan's case and the publicity around it made the South African media much more cautious about publishing anything critical of any government agency;[58] in the longer term they led to a process of prison reform which helped the next generation of political prisoners such as Mandela.[40]

Following his second release Strachan was banned from public gatherings until 1975 under the Suppression of Communism Act, 1950, and was also placed under house arrest for the last five years.[10][11][27][59] In 1968 and 1972, Strachan applied to run in the Comrades Marathon, but was refused permission both times by the Chief Magistrate.[60] In 1978, and again in 1979, unknown assailants fired shots at his house, leading him to fortify parts of it with steel plate and breeze blocks.[61] The stress of imprisonment, banning, and the attacks on his home led to family difficulties.[62][63] Ben Turok wrote in his autobiography that in the 1973 Durban strikes he had channelled funds via Strachan to support trade unions without the permission of the SACP, and that Turok had been expelled from the party for refusing to reveal his contact.[64] Strachan was unusual among white activists in that he did not go into exile following his release but stayed on in South Africa.[65] He acknowledged the support of his wife over the decades when he was unable to work.[10] They had a daughter, Susie, and a son, Joe,[4][63][66] and separated in the mid-1990s.[67][68] Maggie Strachan went on to become a well-known local artist.[69][70][71] Harold Strachan had a third child in France who he never met.[68]

Later life, writing, and death

 
Drakensberg mountains, South Africa

In 1990, Mandela was released on the orders of F. W. de Klerk; most apartheid legislation came to an end the following year.[14] This was decisively endorsed by the ruling white minority in a 1992 referendum. That year, Mbeki and Strachan had a tearful reunion at the African National Congress (ANC) congress in Durban.

"You know, Govan, we were quite brave", said Harold. "My God", said Mbeki, "We were fucking brave, we really were."[72]

Strachan became publicly alienated from the ANC because of what he saw as their authoritarian tendencies and the indiscriminate bombing campaigns they carried out after his imprisonment; in return, the ANC ensured that he was marginalised once they came to power.[65][73] In South Africa's first majority election in 1994, when Mandela became the country's first democratically elected president, Strachan voted for the Democratic Party.[74] He testified to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 1996 and 1997.[50][62][63]

His artistic career was held back by his activism, but he has paintings in the collection of Durban Art Gallery[nb 8] and in private collections.[3] He worked as an art restorer,[11] and illustrated Hugh Lewin's book Bandiet: Out Of Jail.[76][77]

In 1997, after his wife left him, a friend persuaded him to get a computer and to learn to type.[67] He wrote an original manuscript, titled So It Goes,[nb 9] in six weeks.[27] It was published as Way Up, Way Out in 1998, and describes his childhood in Pretoria, his schooling in Natal and his pilot training. It includes his descriptions of walking in the Drakensberg mountains,[79] which he continued as his children grew up.[66] Dan Jacobson commented in the London Review of Books that Strachan had "seized eagerly on the expressive potentialities of South African English demotic speech ... in order to make something new and rare of it".[80][81] He made a link between the protagonist's "call to arms" in the Second World War and the author's motivation in his struggle against apartheid.[82] Strachan was disappointed with the edited version that was published.[27] Critics have debated whether it should be viewed as fiction or autobiography; Jacobson called it a Bildungsroman.[83]

His second book, Make a Skyf, Man! (2004)[nb 10] is about his time in MK and in prison.[85] He describes his involvement as a "boys' own armed struggle"; one passage depicts a successful demonstration of a bomb to a senior comrade (Yoshke, based on Joe Slovo[86]) by blowing up a beach toilet:

Yoshke grips my left arm and cries 'Power, Comrade!' and Max on my right grips the arm on that side and declares 'Comrade, if we're going to conquer all South Africa one shithouse at a time we'll all be in the grave before liberation ...'[39]

The book begins and ends with stories about angling for shad, a longstanding passion of Strachan's.[39][87] Both books are autobiographical fiction and were based on anecdotes he told.[39] He described how he tried to use the techniques of painting, such as contrast of texture, in his writing,[39] and expressed his admiration for the writing style of John Bunyan and Laurence Sterne (Tristram Shandy was his favourite book in prison[88]), and the emotional authenticity of Thomas Hardy and Graham Greene.[89] He also wrote regular columns for publications including the Weekend Witness[10] and Noseweek. He remained as astrant (Afrikaans for "irreverent") in post-apartheid South Africa as he was as an activist.[39][90]

In April 2011 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Durban University of Technology in recognition of his contributions to art and democracy.[10][91] In June 2011 he underwent triple coronary artery bypass surgery after suffering chest pains.[92]

Strachan moved to a care home in September 2019, and died from complications of liver disease on 7 February 2020, aged 94. He was cremated, and there was no funeral according to his wishes.[68][93]

References

Notes

  1. ^ In Way Up, Way Out, Strachan calls them "hensoppers", a term from the Second Anglo-Boer War. It was used to describe Afrikaners who sought compromise with the British at the end of the war.[5][6]
  2. ^ Along with "an Indian bloke called Bugwandeen" from the Natal Indian Congress, and Anthony de Crespigny.[29]
  3. ^ A member of the public had recognised Strachan by his Comrades Marathon blazer.[30]
  4. ^ Govan Mbeki's son Thabo Mbeki later served as President of South Africa from 1999–2008.[32]
  5. ^ The armed wing of the African National Congress, formed in 1961 after the ANC were banned.[35]
  6. ^ He and Maggie had previously been acquitted of riotous assembly for the 1960 incident in Durban, on the grounds that although they had refused to move when ordered, the rest of the crowd had dispersed, and so no offence was committed.[47]
  7. ^ The Prisons Act stated that anyone writing about prisons had to be able to prove the truth of their statements. The government also took action against the Mail, which resulted in the editor, Laurence Gandar, losing his job.[50]
  8. ^ "Nature Morte" depicts a dead protester in Durban in 1960, and was purchased in 1970. In 1995 the gallery also bought Strachan's 1964 self-portrait.[75]
  9. ^ A reference to the anti-war book Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut.[78]
  10. ^ A skyf is Afrikaans-derived South African slang for a cigarette or cannabis joint.[84]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Molver (2010), p. 18.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Molver (2010), p. 10.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Harold Strachan". Sunday Times. 10 May 1998. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  4. ^ a b Strachan, Harold (24 March 2012). "Sandy Life". Weekend Witness. PressReader.com. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  5. ^ Strachan (1998), pp. 5, 12.
  6. ^ Molver (2010), p. 47.
  7. ^ Levin, Mark (1 January 2017). "Capturing a disappearing city skyline". Independent Online. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  8. ^ Strachan, Harold (19 August 2016). "Something Soft". The Witness. PressReader.com. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  9. ^ Strachan, Harold (9 June 2012). "Excelsior!". Weekend Witness. PressReader.com. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Mngoma, Sphumelele (24 December 2010). "DUT to honour columnist Harold Strachan". News24. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  11. ^ a b c d "Harold Strachan is served with restriction order". South African History Online. 3 July 1965. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  12. ^ Pogrund (2000), p. 158.
  13. ^ Strachan (1998), pp. 133–135, 141.
  14. ^ a b "South Africa profile - Timeline". BBC News. 9 August 2017. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  15. ^ a b "Comrades Marathon Results History". Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  16. ^ Molver (2010), p. 15, Appendix 7, Interview 2003d.
  17. ^ Herbstein, Denis (3 January 2011). "Jean Middleton obituary". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  18. ^ Miles, Elza. "Selby Mvusi". Revisions. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  19. ^ Cameron-Dow (2012).
  20. ^ Strachan, Harold. "Agony and ecstasy". Noseweek 159. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  21. ^ Crawley, Clive. "Dear Editor". Noseweek 160. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  22. ^ Johnson, R.W. (2013). "We Owe Tom Sharpe a Thousand Laughs". Standpoint. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  23. ^ Molver (2010), pp. 11–12.
  24. ^ Molver (2010), p. 30: "... I felt personally offended by apartheid. ... on my behalf they were making people carry parcels around and insulting them and abusing them, diminishing them in every possible way, at the same time scoring money out of – I didn’t want anybody to do that on my behalf..."
  25. ^ Molver (2010), p. 11.
  26. ^ Molver (2010), p. 12.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g Molver, Zoë (1 October 2007). . English in Africa. Business.highbeam.com. Archived from the original on 11 October 2012. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  28. ^ Molver (2010), p. 13.
  29. ^ Molver (2010), p. 6, Appendix 7, Interview 2003a.
  30. ^ Strachan (2004), p. 96.
  31. ^ a b Molver (2010), p. 15.
  32. ^ Cooksey, Katie (20 September 2008). "Thabo Mbeki to step down as South African president after ANC request". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  33. ^ Bundy (2013), p. 101.
  34. ^ Molver (2010), p. 16.
  35. ^ "uMkhonto weSizwe (MK)". South African History Online. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  36. ^ South African Democracy Education Trust (2004), p. 121.
  37. ^ Bundy (2013), p. 111.
  38. ^ Cherry (2012), pp. 20–21.
  39. ^ a b c d e f g h Molver, Zoë (5 March 2007). "Harold Strachan: Bram's Bow-maker". literarytourism.co.za. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  40. ^ a b c d Molver (2010), p. 2.
  41. ^ Molver (2010), p. 11, Appendix 7, Interview 2003a.
  42. ^ Strachan (2004), pp. 46, 51.
  43. ^ Molver (2010), p. 29, Appendix 7, Interview 2003d.
  44. ^ South African Democracy Education Trust (2004), pp. 122, 124.
  45. ^ South African Democracy Education Trust (2004), p. 124.
  46. ^ Strachan (2004), p. 79.
  47. ^ Strachan (2004), p. 97.
  48. ^ Strachan (2004), p. 77.
  49. ^ Molver (2010), p. 17.
  50. ^ a b c d e f "Human Rights Violations – Submissions: Questions and Answers". Truth and Reconciliation Commission. 22 July 1997. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  51. ^ Strachan (2004), pp. 135–138.
  52. ^ Molver (2010), p. 166.
  53. ^ "The indictment of Nelson Mandela and others (Rivonia 10) for sabotage". Law2.umkc.edu. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  54. ^ Molver (2010), pp. 24–25.
  55. ^ Pogrund (2000), pp. 158–166.
  56. ^ South African Democracy Education Trust (2004), pp. 380, 675.
  57. ^ Lewin (2002), p. 53, quoted in Molver (2010, pp. 167–168)
  58. ^ "Chapter 7: Institutional Hearing: Prisons – The O'Malley Archives". Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Reporting on prisons. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  59. ^ Molver (2010), pp. 18–20.
  60. ^ Molver (2010), p. 137.
  61. ^ Molver (2010), p. 20.
  62. ^ a b "Truth Commission – TRC Final Report – Volume 3, Section 1, Chapter 3". SABC. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  63. ^ a b c "MK co-founder tells truth commission of attempts on his life". Truth and Reconciliation Commission. South African Press Association. 24 October 1996. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  64. ^ Suttner, Raymond (28 August 2008). "When Members Disagree with Their Party". Cape Times, South Africa.[dead link]
  65. ^ a b Molver (2010), p. 150.
  66. ^ a b Strachan, Harold (19 November 2011). "Inkankana Life". Weekend Witness. PressReader.com. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  67. ^ a b Molver (2010), p. 33.
  68. ^ a b c "Harold Strachan obituary". The Times. 17 February 2020. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  69. ^ "Artsmart: Maggie Strachan and Lara Mellon". Artsmart. 3 November 2008. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  70. ^ "Art and friendship lost, found and stolen". Independent Online. IOL Entertainment. 17 May 2012. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  71. ^ Carelse, Erin (4 October 2017). "Durban Artists' Group Draws Inspiration from Trappists". The Southern Cross. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  72. ^ Molver (2010), p. 174.
  73. ^ Molver (2010), p. 5, Appendix 7, Interview 2004b: "It ended up as just another bloody terrorist organisation and it started off with a lot of dignity under Albert Luthuli, you know, and it was wrecked"
  74. ^ Molver (2010), p. 21.
  75. ^ Molver (2010), p. 22.
  76. ^ Lewin (2002).
  77. ^ . Penguin Random House South Africa. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  78. ^ Molver (2010), p. 51.
  79. ^ Strachan (1998), pp. 103–112.
  80. ^ Jacobson, Dan (2 January 2003). "Dan Jacobson reviews 'Way Up Way Out' by Harold Strachan". London Review of Books. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  81. ^ Molver (2010), pp. 5–6.
  82. ^ Molver (2010), p. 151.
  83. ^ Molver (2010), p. 36.
  84. ^ "Skyf definition and meaning". Collins English Dictionary. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  85. ^ Strachan (2004).
  86. ^ Molver (2010), p. 158.
  87. ^ Strachan, Harold (1 May 2010). "Jugnath". The Witness. News24. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  88. ^ Molver (2010), p. 109.
  89. ^ Molver (2010), pp. 36–37.
  90. ^ Molver (2010), p. 4.
  91. ^ Gawe, Nqabomzi (8 February 2012). "Top honour for South Africans". Durban University of Technology. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  92. ^ Sewchurran, Rowan (25 June 2011). "Harold has a heart op in good spirits: Down but not out". News24. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
  93. ^ Craig, Nathan (16 February 2020). "Umkhonto we Sizwe's first explosives whizz Harold Strachan dies". Sunday Tribune.

Bibliography

External links

  • London Review of Books
  • Video interview

harold, strachan, robert, harold, lundie, jock, strachan, december, 1925, february, 2020, white, south, african, writer, anti, apartheid, activist, flew, south, african, force, during, second, world, trained, artist, then, became, umkhonto, sizwe, first, explo. Robert Harold Lundie Jock Strachan 1 December 1925 7 February 2020 was a white South African writer and anti apartheid activist He flew for the South African Air Force during the Second World War trained as an artist then became Umkhonto we Sizwe s first explosives expert He was imprisoned for sabotage and after his release served another sentence for telling a journalist about poor prison conditions He wrote two semi autobiographical books and completed the Comrades Marathon twice winning a medal once He married twice and had three children Harold StrachanA still from an interview with Strachan in 2010MK Chief of ExplosivesIn office 1961 1963Preceded byoffice establishedSucceeded byvacantPersonal detailsBornRobert Harold Lundie Strachan 1 1925 12 01 1 December 1925Pretoria South AfricaDied7 February 2020 2020 02 07 aged 94 SpousesJean Middleton 1950 1958 Maggie Strachan 1959 2020 OccupationArtist Anti apartheid activist WriterMilitary careerAllegianceSouth AfricaService wbr branchSouth African Air Force Umkhonto we SizweYears of service1943 1946RankLieutenant SAAF Contents 1 Early life art and running 2 Activism sabotage and imprisonment 3 Later life writing and death 4 References 5 External linksEarly life art and running EditHarold Strachan was born in Pretoria on 1 December 1925 2 3 His father had been a metalworker in the Clyde shipyards who had emigrated from Scotland to South Africa in 1902 2 4 and his mother was a teacher from an Afrikaner family nb 1 7 When Harold was three his mother left his father for another Scotsman Jimmy Brown 2 Brown died in 1931 from the effects of poison gas in the First World War and his mother moved with Harold and his two sisters to Pietermaritzburg in Natal 8 He attended Merchiston Preparatory School then Maritzburg College 9 where he began to develop his political consciousness 10 A Harvard of the SAAF Strachan joined the South African Air Force straight from school and served as a pilot towards the end of the Second World War 11 with the rank of lieutenant 12 He trained on the Tiger Moth and did advanced training on the Airspeed Oxford 13 From 1946 to 1949 he studied for a Fine Arts degree at Natal University College in Pietermaritzburg 2 10 In 1948 the ruling National Party introduced apartheid a system of institutionalised racial segregation and discrimination against the black majority 14 In 1949 Strachan completed the Comrades Marathon an 89 kilometre 55 mi ultramarathon run between Pietermaritzburg and Durban 15 For a period after he left the air force as a reservist he used to enjoy spending a month of each year flying the Harvard to keep his proficiency 16 In 1950 Strachan won a scholarship to study at the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts in London 3 and married fellow South African Jean Middleton 2 17 In 1951 he took a course in painting restoration at the State Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart 2 In 1952 he returned to London and worked as a security guard and in 1953 he managed his brother in law s painting and decorating business in Chingola in Northern Rhodesia now Zambia where he encouraged the black workers to unionise 2 During the 1950s he worked with the artist Selby Mvusi 3 18 Before he ran the 1954 Comrades Marathon Strachan is supposed to have prepared for the race by drinking gin and vermouth with his wife 19 He finished sixth in 7 h 48 min and earned a gold medal 15 20 21 He was friendly with the English satirist Tom Sharpe until they fell out over a woman 22 Strachan worked as a lecturer and teacher from 1955 to 1960 10 23 He was divorced from Middleton in 1958 2 Activism sabotage and imprisonment EditStrachan s opposition to apartheid arose from his personal ethics rather than ideology 24 He became a founder member of the Liberal Party of South Africa in 1954 along with Alan Paton and Peter Brown 25 and in 1957 joined the Congress of Democrats 26 27 In 1959 he married Maggie von Lier his former student 28 In 1960 during the protests after the Sharpeville massacre he and Maggie stood between armed police and black protesters preventing the police from firing nb 2 27 A warrant was issued for their arrest and to avoid it they fled to Swaziland nb 3 31 Three months later they returned to South Africa Harold under the name Robert Jock Lundie 31 and settled in Port Elizabeth where Harold worked with Govan Mbeki and helped him produce and distribute the newsletter Izwe Lomzi Voice of the People nb 4 3 33 In 1961 he joined the illegal South African Communist Party SACP and edited their newspaper New Age 11 34 He accepted Mbeki s request to improvise explosive devices for the newly formed Umkhonto we Sizwe MK nb 5 and experimented with substances such as nitric acid potassium permanganate magnesium glycerol and icing sugar 36 37 38 this was our job devices and explosives So I said for God s sake why me And they said no well you were a bomber pilot in the war you see so you must know how to make bombs I said but for Christ s sake Govan we didn t make our own bombs And they said but you know about those things and I said no bombs were made in bloody factories I don t know So he said anyway you re appointed We did a good job actually Strachan quoted by Zoe Molver 39 Govan Mbeki under arrest in 1963 Strachan who was MK s first explosives expert 40 designed a simple incendiary device based on petrol and initiated by glycerol filtering through beach sand onto potassium permanganate He later researched and created an explosive device based on a form of ammonal 41 inspired by his reading of Robert Graves 42 He trained other operatives who then disseminated the expertise through a clandestine cell system 43 His home made bombs were planted at strategic infrastructure targets like electrical substations and railway lines 44 As far as is known there were no deaths in these attacks 45 He was caught when one of his trainees planted an improperly constructed incendiary device in the magistrate s court in Butterworth It failed to go off was discovered and the operative was traced by fingerprint evidence When tortured by the police he revealed Strachan s address 46 Strachan was arrested at gunpoint and tried under the Explosives Act He was found guilty of sabotage on 8 May 1962 and sentenced to six years imprisonment with three years suspended nb 6 48 49 He served thirteen months of his sentence in solitary confinement in Pretoria Central Prison and had his teeth removed 27 39 50 He passed the time in solitary constructing a Tiger Moth in his imagination then preparing an aerobatics routine for it 51 52 When Strachan was named as a conspirator in the Rivonia Trial in 1963 64 53 he refused to give evidence against Mbeki and Denis Goldberg even when he was threatened with hanging 54 Most of the accused at Rivonia including Nelson Mandela got life imprisonment as the law had been strengthened after Strachan s trial 50 On 31 March 1965 Strachan faced a further trial for other bomb attacks but was found not guilty He was released in May 1 On his release he gave an account of his life in prison to the journalist Benjamin Pogrund 55 who used it to write an article critical of the conditions under which prisoners were kept which included frequent assaults and poor sanitary conditions When the story was published in the Rand Daily Mail in late June and early July 1965 1 the government invoked the Prisons Act 27 50 In the subsequent court case a fellow saboteur gave evidence contradicting Strachan s allegations and in May 1966 Strachan was imprisoned for 2 1 2 years nb 7 40 This was reduced to 1 1 2 on appeal 50 56 then to one year via an amnesty 40 During his second incarceration he was not allowed to read or study he helped raise the morale of fellow political prisoners by designing props and costumes for amateur dramatics 39 57 Strachan s case and the publicity around it made the South African media much more cautious about publishing anything critical of any government agency 58 in the longer term they led to a process of prison reform which helped the next generation of political prisoners such as Mandela 40 Following his second release Strachan was banned from public gatherings until 1975 under the Suppression of Communism Act 1950 and was also placed under house arrest for the last five years 10 11 27 59 In 1968 and 1972 Strachan applied to run in the Comrades Marathon but was refused permission both times by the Chief Magistrate 60 In 1978 and again in 1979 unknown assailants fired shots at his house leading him to fortify parts of it with steel plate and breeze blocks 61 The stress of imprisonment banning and the attacks on his home led to family difficulties 62 63 Ben Turok wrote in his autobiography that in the 1973 Durban strikes he had channelled funds via Strachan to support trade unions without the permission of the SACP and that Turok had been expelled from the party for refusing to reveal his contact 64 Strachan was unusual among white activists in that he did not go into exile following his release but stayed on in South Africa 65 He acknowledged the support of his wife over the decades when he was unable to work 10 They had a daughter Susie and a son Joe 4 63 66 and separated in the mid 1990s 67 68 Maggie Strachan went on to become a well known local artist 69 70 71 Harold Strachan had a third child in France who he never met 68 Later life writing and death Edit Drakensberg mountains South AfricaIn 1990 Mandela was released on the orders of F W de Klerk most apartheid legislation came to an end the following year 14 This was decisively endorsed by the ruling white minority in a 1992 referendum That year Mbeki and Strachan had a tearful reunion at the African National Congress ANC congress in Durban You know Govan we were quite brave said Harold My God said Mbeki We were fucking brave we really were 72 Strachan became publicly alienated from the ANC because of what he saw as their authoritarian tendencies and the indiscriminate bombing campaigns they carried out after his imprisonment in return the ANC ensured that he was marginalised once they came to power 65 73 In South Africa s first majority election in 1994 when Mandela became the country s first democratically elected president Strachan voted for the Democratic Party 74 He testified to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 1996 and 1997 50 62 63 His artistic career was held back by his activism but he has paintings in the collection of Durban Art Gallery nb 8 and in private collections 3 He worked as an art restorer 11 and illustrated Hugh Lewin s book Bandiet Out Of Jail 76 77 In 1997 after his wife left him a friend persuaded him to get a computer and to learn to type 67 He wrote an original manuscript titled So It Goes nb 9 in six weeks 27 It was published as Way Up Way Out in 1998 and describes his childhood in Pretoria his schooling in Natal and his pilot training It includes his descriptions of walking in the Drakensberg mountains 79 which he continued as his children grew up 66 Dan Jacobson commented in the London Review of Books that Strachan had seized eagerly on the expressive potentialities of South African English demotic speech in order to make something new and rare of it 80 81 He made a link between the protagonist s call to arms in the Second World War and the author s motivation in his struggle against apartheid 82 Strachan was disappointed with the edited version that was published 27 Critics have debated whether it should be viewed as fiction or autobiography Jacobson called it a Bildungsroman 83 His second book Make a Skyf Man 2004 nb 10 is about his time in MK and in prison 85 He describes his involvement as a boys own armed struggle one passage depicts a successful demonstration of a bomb to a senior comrade Yoshke based on Joe Slovo 86 by blowing up a beach toilet Yoshke grips my left arm and cries Power Comrade and Max on my right grips the arm on that side and declares Comrade if we re going to conquer all South Africa one shithouse at a time we ll all be in the grave before liberation 39 The book begins and ends with stories about angling for shad a longstanding passion of Strachan s 39 87 Both books are autobiographical fiction and were based on anecdotes he told 39 He described how he tried to use the techniques of painting such as contrast of texture in his writing 39 and expressed his admiration for the writing style of John Bunyan and Laurence Sterne Tristram Shandy was his favourite book in prison 88 and the emotional authenticity of Thomas Hardy and Graham Greene 89 He also wrote regular columns for publications including the Weekend Witness 10 and Noseweek He remained as astrant Afrikaans for irreverent in post apartheid South Africa as he was as an activist 39 90 In April 2011 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Durban University of Technology in recognition of his contributions to art and democracy 10 91 In June 2011 he underwent triple coronary artery bypass surgery after suffering chest pains 92 Strachan moved to a care home in September 2019 and died from complications of liver disease on 7 February 2020 aged 94 He was cremated and there was no funeral according to his wishes 68 93 References EditNotes In Way Up Way Out Strachan calls them hensoppers a term from the Second Anglo Boer War It was used to describe Afrikaners who sought compromise with the British at the end of the war 5 6 Along with an Indian bloke called Bugwandeen from the Natal Indian Congress and Anthony de Crespigny 29 A member of the public had recognised Strachan by his Comrades Marathon blazer 30 Govan Mbeki s son Thabo Mbeki later served as President of South Africa from 1999 2008 32 The armed wing of the African National Congress formed in 1961 after the ANC were banned 35 He and Maggie had previously been acquitted of riotous assembly for the 1960 incident in Durban on the grounds that although they had refused to move when ordered the rest of the crowd had dispersed and so no offence was committed 47 The Prisons Act stated that anyone writing about prisons had to be able to prove the truth of their statements The government also took action against the Mail which resulted in the editor Laurence Gandar losing his job 50 Nature Morte depicts a dead protester in Durban in 1960 and was purchased in 1970 In 1995 the gallery also bought Strachan s 1964 self portrait 75 A reference to the anti war book Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut 78 A skyf is Afrikaans derived South African slang for a cigarette or cannabis joint 84 Citations a b c Molver 2010 p 18 a b c d e f g h Molver 2010 p 10 a b c d e Harold Strachan Sunday Times 10 May 1998 Retrieved 29 October 2017 a b Strachan Harold 24 March 2012 Sandy Life Weekend Witness PressReader com Retrieved 4 November 2017 Strachan 1998 pp 5 12 Molver 2010 p 47 Levin Mark 1 January 2017 Capturing a disappearing city skyline Independent Online Retrieved 4 November 2017 Strachan Harold 19 August 2016 Something Soft The Witness PressReader com Retrieved 4 November 2017 Strachan Harold 9 June 2012 Excelsior Weekend Witness PressReader com Retrieved 31 October 2017 a b c d e f g Mngoma Sphumelele 24 December 2010 DUT to honour columnist Harold Strachan News24 Retrieved 31 October 2017 a b c d Harold Strachan is served with restriction order South African History Online 3 July 1965 Retrieved 4 February 2013 Pogrund 2000 p 158 Strachan 1998 pp 133 135 141 a b South Africa profile Timeline BBC News 9 August 2017 Retrieved 3 December 2017 a b Comrades Marathon Results History Retrieved 4 November 2017 Molver 2010 p 15 Appendix 7 Interview 2003d Herbstein Denis 3 January 2011 Jean Middleton obituary TheGuardian com Retrieved 29 October 2017 Miles Elza Selby Mvusi Revisions Retrieved 3 November 2017 Cameron Dow 2012 Strachan Harold Agony and ecstasy Noseweek 159 Retrieved 4 November 2017 Crawley Clive Dear Editor Noseweek 160 Retrieved 4 November 2017 Johnson R W 2013 We Owe Tom Sharpe a Thousand Laughs Standpoint Retrieved 4 November 2017 Molver 2010 pp 11 12 Molver 2010 p 30 I felt personally offended by apartheid on my behalf they were making people carry parcels around and insulting them and abusing them diminishing them in every possible way at the same time scoring money out of I didn t want anybody to do that on my behalf Molver 2010 p 11 Molver 2010 p 12 a b c d e f g Molver Zoe 1 October 2007 But he didn t know how to read it The editing of Harold Strachan s Way Up Way Out English in Africa Business highbeam com Archived from the original on 11 October 2012 Retrieved 4 February 2013 Molver 2010 p 13 Molver 2010 p 6 Appendix 7 Interview 2003a Strachan 2004 p 96 a b Molver 2010 p 15 Cooksey Katie 20 September 2008 Thabo Mbeki to step down as South African president after ANC request TheGuardian com Retrieved 5 December 2017 Bundy 2013 p 101 Molver 2010 p 16 uMkhonto weSizwe MK South African History Online Retrieved 5 December 2017 South African Democracy Education Trust 2004 p 121 Bundy 2013 p 111 Cherry 2012 pp 20 21 a b c d e f g h Molver Zoe 5 March 2007 Harold Strachan Bram s Bow maker literarytourism co za Retrieved 30 October 2017 a b c d Molver 2010 p 2 Molver 2010 p 11 Appendix 7 Interview 2003a Strachan 2004 pp 46 51 Molver 2010 p 29 Appendix 7 Interview 2003d South African Democracy Education Trust 2004 pp 122 124 South African Democracy Education Trust 2004 p 124 Strachan 2004 p 79 Strachan 2004 p 97 Strachan 2004 p 77 Molver 2010 p 17 a b c d e f Human Rights Violations Submissions Questions and Answers Truth and Reconciliation Commission 22 July 1997 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Strachan 2004 pp 135 138 Molver 2010 p 166 The indictment of Nelson Mandela and others Rivonia 10 for sabotage Law2 umkc edu Retrieved 4 February 2013 Molver 2010 pp 24 25 Pogrund 2000 pp 158 166 South African Democracy Education Trust 2004 pp 380 675 Lewin 2002 p 53 quoted in Molver 2010 pp 167 168 Chapter 7 Institutional Hearing Prisons The O Malley Archives Truth and Reconciliation Commission Reporting on prisons Retrieved 4 November 2017 Molver 2010 pp 18 20 Molver 2010 p 137 Molver 2010 p 20 a b Truth Commission TRC Final Report Volume 3 Section 1 Chapter 3 SABC Retrieved 30 October 2017 a b c MK co founder tells truth commission of attempts on his life Truth and Reconciliation Commission South African Press Association 24 October 1996 Retrieved 30 October 2017 Suttner Raymond 28 August 2008 When Members Disagree with Their Party Cape Times South Africa dead link a b Molver 2010 p 150 a b Strachan Harold 19 November 2011 Inkankana Life Weekend Witness PressReader com Retrieved 4 November 2017 a b Molver 2010 p 33 a b c Harold Strachan obituary The Times 17 February 2020 Retrieved 21 February 2020 Artsmart Maggie Strachan and Lara Mellon Artsmart 3 November 2008 Retrieved 4 December 2017 Art and friendship lost found and stolen Independent Online IOL Entertainment 17 May 2012 Retrieved 4 December 2017 Carelse Erin 4 October 2017 Durban Artists Group Draws Inspiration from Trappists The Southern Cross Retrieved 4 December 2017 Molver 2010 p 174 Molver 2010 p 5 Appendix 7 Interview 2004b It ended up as just another bloody terrorist organisation and it started off with a lot of dignity under Albert Luthuli you know and it was wrecked Molver 2010 p 21 Molver 2010 p 22 Lewin 2002 Bandiet Out Of Jail by Lewin Hugh Penguin Random House South Africa Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 4 November 2017 Molver 2010 p 51 Strachan 1998 pp 103 112 Jacobson Dan 2 January 2003 Dan Jacobson reviews Way Up Way Out by Harold Strachan London Review of Books Retrieved 5 December 2017 Molver 2010 pp 5 6 Molver 2010 p 151 Molver 2010 p 36 Skyf definition and meaning Collins English Dictionary Retrieved 3 November 2017 Strachan 2004 Molver 2010 p 158 Strachan Harold 1 May 2010 Jugnath The Witness News24 Retrieved 5 November 2017 Molver 2010 p 109 Molver 2010 pp 36 37 Molver 2010 p 4 Gawe Nqabomzi 8 February 2012 Top honour for South Africans Durban University of Technology Retrieved 31 October 2017 Sewchurran Rowan 25 June 2011 Harold has a heart op in good spirits Down but not out News24 Retrieved 8 January 2018 Craig Nathan 16 February 2020 Umkhonto we Sizwe s first explosives whizz Harold Strachan dies Sunday Tribune Bibliography Bundy Colin 2013 Govan Mbeki Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 8214 4459 7 Cameron Dow John 2012 Comrades Marathon The Ultimate Human Race Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 14 352863 0 Cherry Janet 2012 Spear of the Nation Umkhonto weSizwe South Africa s Liberation Army 1960s 1990s Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 8214 4443 6 Lewin Hugh 2002 Bandiet Out of Jail Random House ISBN 978 0 9584468 1 5 Molver Zoe 2010 Harold Strachan in Context Guerilla Artist Writer PhD University of KwaZulu Natal Pogrund Benjamin 2000 War of Words Memoir of a South African Journalist Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1 888363 71 5 South African Democracy Education Trust 2004 The Road to Democracy in South Africa 1960 1970 Zebra ISBN 978 1 86872 906 7 Strachan Harold 1998 Way Up Way Out A Satirical Novel New Africa Books ISBN 978 0 86486 355 3 Strachan Harold 2004 Make a Skyf Man Jacana Media ISBN 978 1 77009 033 0 External links EditNewspapers Courage in South Africa TIME 23 July 1965 London Review of Books Video interview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harold Strachan amp oldid 1120309810, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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