- Hilda Bernstein
Hilda Bernstein (
May 15 ,1915 –September 8 ,2006 ) was anauthor ,artist , and anactivist againstapartheid and forwomen's rights . She was born Hilda Schwarz inLondon and emigrated toSouth Africa at the age of 18 years and became active inpolitics . She married fellow activist Lionel "Rusty" Bernstein in March 1941, and together they played prominent roles in the struggle to endApartheid in South Africa. After her husband was tried and acquitted in theRivonia Trial in 1964, government harassment forced them to flee toBotswana , an ordeal described in her book "The World That Was Ours". They lived in Britain for some years where she further established herself internationally as a speaker, writer, and artist. She returned with her husband to South Africa in 1994 for the South African election in which fellow activistNelson Mandela was elected President. She died at the age of 91 inCape Town, South Africa .Early life
Bernstein was born in
London to Russian immigrants Simeon and Dora Schwarz. When she was ten her father, who was a lifelong Bolshevik and had been the Russian Trade Attaché to Britain, was recalled to theSoviet Union . He was not able to return to Britain, and after his death she quit school to work before emigrating toSouth Africa at the age of 18 to work injournalism .Activism in South Africa
In response to the rise of
fascism in Europe, she became involved with the Labour Party. This party, however, did not share her growing concern withapartheid and she left it to join theSouth African Communist Party , the only South African party with no racial segregation. She demonstrated her speaking and organizing skills on the party's district committee and national executive committee.Through her political activities she met Lionel "Rusty" Bernstein, whom she married in March 1941.
In 1943 she was elected to the city council of
Johannesburg by a then all-white electorate, the only member of the Communist Party to do so. She used this position for three years as a platform for publicizing the injustices of apartheid.In the 1950s she became more focused on organizing with women. She was a founding member of the multi-racial
Federation of South African Women in 1956, and she was one of the organizers of theWomen's March to Pretoria . Her writings were appearing regularly in periodicals in South Africa and other nations in Africa and Europe.As early as 1946 the South African government began its attempts to limit her activities and minimize her political influence. In that year she was convicted of assisting an illegal strike of black mineworkers. In 1953 the government banned her membership in a list of organizations, and in 1958 extended this ban to prohibit her from writing or publishing. In 1960 she was detained during the state of emergency declared after the
Sharpeville massacre . She was therefore required to go underground with her political work.In 1963 her husband Rusty was one of 19
African National Congress leaders arrested at Johannesburg suburb of Rivonia. Rusty was acquitted at theRivonia Trial , but was soon rearrested and released on bail to house arrest. Hilda Bernstein fled from their home as the police were on the way to arrest her. They fled toBotswana , crossing the border on foot.Life in exile
In exile, the Bernsteins eventually settled in Britain where they continued to work in support of the African National Congress. She also dedicated her written and oral communication skills to the
Anti-Apartheid Movement and the British peace movement. Her writings and speaking engagements were numerous inEurope , theUnited States , andCanada .She wrote several books, including "The World That was Ours" which documented their flight from South Africa. She also dedicated more time to her art, which appeared in several shows and became part of many public and private collections. Her artwork has also been used in many publications for the Anti-Apartheid Movement.
Return to South Africa
Rusty and Hilda Bernstein returned to South Africa in 1994 to participate in the South African election which was the first democratic election where all races were allowed to vote, and see the end of
apartheid and their fellow ANC memberNelson Mandela become president.In 1998, both Rusty and Hilda were awarded honorary degrees from the
University of Natal for their role in helping to bring democracy to South Africa. Rusty died at their home in 2002.In 2004 she was awarded the Luthuli Silver Award for her "contribution to the attainment gender equality and a free and democratic society" in South Africa. She died from heart failure at the age of 91 at her home in
Cape Town, South Africa . She was survived by their four children: Toni, Patrick, Frances, and Keith Bernstein.Published works
*"The World That Was Ours" (Persephone Books, 1967, ISBN 1-903155-40-1)
*"The Terrorism of Torture"
*"For Their Triumphs and For Their Tears: Women in Apartheid South Africa" (Africa Fund, 1985, ISBN 0-904759-58-X)
*"Steve Biko" (Victor Kamkin, 1978, ISBN 0-904759-21-0)
*"No. 46: Steve Biko" (Victor Kamkin, 1978, ISBN 0-317-36653-X)
*"Death is Part of the Process" (Sinclair Browne, ISBN 0-86300-028-2)
*"The Rift: The Exile Experience of South Africans"
*"A World of One's Own" (reprinted as "Separation", Corvo Books, ISBN 0-9543255-2-4)
*"The Trials of Nelson Mandela"ources
*"Hilda Bernstein, 91, Author and Anti-Apartheid Activist, Dies", Associated Press, "The New York Times", September 13, 2006.
* [http://www.rusty-bernstein.com/hilda-bernstein-links.htm "Hilda Bernstein Obituary"] , Lionel "Rusty" Bernstein — South African freedom fighter — tribute website, Patrick Bernstein. (Retrieved September 13, 2006)External links
* [http://www.guernicagallery.com/bernstein/index.htm "Hilda Bernstein"] , Guernica Gallery of Graphic Arts
* [http://www.rusty-bernstein.com/hilda-bernstein-links.htm "Hilda Bernstein Obituary"] , at Lionel "Rusty" Bernstein — South African freedom fighter — tribute website
* [http://www.rusty-bernstein.com/pictures-3.htm "Hilda Bernstein Pictures"] at Lionel "Rusty" Bernstein — South African freedom fighter — tribute website
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