Sunday, July 14, 2024

GRIFFITH MXENGE AND MRS VICTORIS NONYAMEZELO MXENGE – FREEDOM FIGHTERS WHO SACRIFICED THEIR LIVES

 






(Griffith Mxenge)                                                         (Victoria Mxenge)

REMEMBERING GRIFFITH MXENGE AND HIS WIFE,

 MRS VICTORIA NONYAMEZELO MXENGE – WHO

 WERE BOTH BRUTALLY MURDERED BY THE

 APARTHEID POLICE IN DURBAN IN NOVEMBER 1981

 AND AUGUST 1985 RESPECTIVELY

AUGUST 3 2024

INTRODUCTION:



On August 8 1985, the Press Trust of SA Third World News Agency, which paid a heavy price for supplying the world with news and reports about the struggles in South Africa at that time, published a lengthy article about the life of political trials lawyer, Mrs Victoria Nonyamezelo Mxenge.

We at PTSA had written the profile only seven days after Mrs Mxenge was brutally murdered in the driveway of her home in the Umlazi township in Durban. She was stabbed and shot to death by four unknown assailants after she got out of a car driven by the Reverend Mcebisi Xundu, who was the chairperson of the United Democratic Front (UDF) in Natal at that time.

Her husband, political activist, political trials lawyer and former Robben Island prisoner, Griffith Mxenge, was stabbed to death brutally more than 40 times five years earlier in November 1981.

Her death raised suspicions that apartheid death squads were cold-bloodedly culling the ranks of black activists in South Africa. 

Mrs Mxenge, who was one of the defence attorneys in the trial in which 16 UDF leaders faced high treason charges, was the 40th black activist to have been killed brutally or to have disappeared mysteriously since the violence in the townships erupted once again in September 1984. After our freedom in 1994, it was disclosed that apartheid security agents, led by Dirk Coetzee, had been responsible for their brutal murders. Sadly, they were granted amnesty by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) after they disclosed their roles in the murders of the Mxenges.

                          (Griffith and Victoria Mxenge)

This article, written as a tribute to Mrs Mxenge’s sacrifices and dedication to the struggle, was supplied to news organisations and radio stations around the world in August 1985. The article was based mainly on interviews that this correspondent, Subry Govender, had  conducted with her after the brutal death of Griffith Mxenge in November 1981.

Subry Govender conducted the interviews with Mrs Mxenge under trying conditions because of the political repression of journalists and activists at that time. On the 39th anniversary of her demise, Govender writes that Mrs Mxenge’s life – especially her early years and when being married to Griffith Mxenge - was rich in history and should never be forgotten.

(Some activist members attending the funeral of Mrs Victoria Mxenge in the Eastern Cape in August 1985)

TEXT

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When I spoke to Mrs Victoria Nonyamezelo Mxenge in 1982, she represented the life of being a typical political widow who had been forced out of circumstances to fill the roles of mother, father, breadwinner and even a  political personality in the community.

Born on 1 January  1942 in the little village of Tamara in the Eastern Cape region of South Africa,  she grew up as a country girl with a sister and two brothers who spent their young lives in carefree oblivion of the political situation developing in the rest of the country.

As the second child of simple and humble parents who were teachers, she began her education in the local village school where she was one of the top pupils in her class. At the tender age of 12 she had to leave home to attend secondary school at Beaufort West, also in the Eastern Cape. After obtaining her matriculation certificate, she joined the Lovedale Hospital in the university town of Alice to train as a nurse.

It was during her student days at the hospital that she came into contact with the young and idealistic Griffith Mxenge who went to visit an  aunt in Tamara. The young couple became friends after their first introduction.

She and Mr Mxenge, who was studying for his law degree at the University of Fort Hare at this time, began dating and by the time he went to Durban to complete his LLB (Bachelor of Law) degree at the University of Natal, their romance had blossomed and they married in November 1964.

In 1965, Mrs Mxenge moved to Durban to join her husband and enrolled at the King Edward V111 Hospital for a course in midwifery.

The young couple got their first taste of Pretoria’s political repression against opponents of apartheid when in April 1966 Griffith was detained by the then dreaded security police for 190 days. At the end of the detention, he was charged under the Suppression of Communism Act and in February 1967 was convicted for three years. Mr Mxenge served a part of his sentence on Robben Island with leaders such as Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Raymond Mahlaba, Govan Mbeki, Andrew Mlangeni and Ahmed Kathrada.

While Mr Mxenge was on the island, Mrs Mxenge gave birth to their first child, Madasa.

Although life with a newly-born son and without work was traumatic, she managed to make ends meet with the help of friends.

When Griffith Mxenge was released at the end of his three-year term, he was served with a two-year banning order and prevented from continuing with his studies at the University of Natal. Despite the pressures of security police harassment and financial problems, Mr Mxenge  completed his law degree with the help of a lecturer in February 1968. And when his banning order expired at the end of 1971, he joined Natal Indian Congress official,  Rabbi Bugwandeen’s law form as an articled clerk. But the security police and the apartheid system did not leave him alone. Just when he was about to complete his articles in 1973, he was slapped with another banning order.

Although they had to put up with the accompanying difficulties and problems, their  marriage had thrived and in December 1973 their second son, Viwe, was born. By this time, she  had completed her midwifery course and joined a clinic in Umlazi where she worked with a “wonderful white doctor”, Dr Wolfgang Bordenstein.

“When I went for an interview, I told the doctor all about Griff’s political activities but the good doctor accepted me without any question.

“The matter, however, did not rest there. A few days after I started work, the security police called on Dr Bordenstein and told him about my background. But since he was already aware of my position, he treated me with the greatest of respect.”

In 1975, her husband’s newly-established law practice was booming and Mr Mxenge was finding it difficult to cope with the work-load. He was looking for someone to assist him and soon found that he could not find a better person than his wife.

After some cajoling on her part, Mr Mxenge  employed her as his clerk. She immediately enrolled with the University of South Africa to study law and by the end of 1979 had passed all her subjects except for one – Afrikaans. With the assistance of a friend, she passed Afrikaans in 1980 and in 1981 joined Griffith as a fully-fledged lawyer in her own right.

But just when she and Mr Mxenge had earned the respect of the entire black community as dedicated political trial lawyers, she was woken up in the early hours of November 18 1981 and told her husband was found dead at the local Umlazi stadium.

When discussing her husband’s death, Mrs Mxenge conceded that she was very bitter.

“The perpetrators of the dastardly deed were not satisfied with the taking of his life only but like the butchers they are, they savaged every part of his body. Every vital organ in his body was savaged. His ears, stomach and even his liver was ripped open,” she whispered and the pain was clearly etched on her face.

(Freedom activists carrying the coffin containing the body of Mrs Victoria Mxenge during her funeral service in the Eastern Cape Town in August 1985.)

And as if the brutality inflicted on her husband was not enough, she had to bear the further pain of seeing the confusion suffered by her children, who could not understand why their father had been butchered in such a manner.

“My six-year-old daughter wanted to know why her father, who was so young had to die when her grandfather was still alive? “What could I tell her? And my eldest son, who was in the middle of his Junior Certificate examination, became a ‘zombie’ after he learnt of his father’s death. He was completely unapproachable. He did not shed a tear but just drew into himself. As his mother I could not even talk to him because I did not know what to say to him. Yet he completed his examination and after writing his last paper, flew with his father’s body from Durban to King William’s Town where the funeral took place.”

In 1982, almost a year after Griffith death, Nonyameselo Mxenge was picking up the pieces and building a new life for herself and her children without her beloved husband. She and her children were going about their lives in the full knowledge that Mr Mxenge had not died in vain – they were in fact confident that freedom struggle would be won with a matter of a few years.

“One day – in the lifetime of my children and myself – we will be free and independent.”

(Some anti-apartheid leaders at the funeral of Mrs Victoria Mxenge in the Eastern Cape in August 1985)

But, sadly she was not able to witness the arrival of freedom and the installation of Nelson Mandela as the first democratic president after the elections in April 1994. Like her husband, she too was brutally hacked to death on August 1 1985.

It was a painful and sorrowful life and, one hopes that she and her husband had not sacrificed their lives in vain. Their lives should become part of our history and not forgotten in our new South Africa. I am sure both Griffith and Victoria Mxenge must be deeply disappointed with the sad state of affairs affecting our country today. They must be hoping that the social, economical and political situation would be boosted to ensure “a better life” for all South Africans. Ends – subrygovender@gmail.com  August 3 2024

 

 


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