The Citizen (KZN)

UCT in apartheid years

COMPELLING: ACCOUNT OF STUDENT PROTESTS AT ‘MOSCOW ON HILL’

- Citizen reporter

Author Howard Phillips provides pioneering, definitive history of period.

Drawing on an extensive array of sources – written, oral and visual – UCT under Apartheid provides a rounded social, intellectu­al, educationa­l, cultural and political history of one of Africa’s foremost universiti­es during the first phase of apartheid.

It puts a spotlight on its leaders, lecturers and students, but its wide focus takes in many other dimensions of this heterogene­ous institutio­n’s history, too – teaching and research, social, cultural and sporting life and its chequered relationsh­ip with the apartheid state, ranging from formal opposition and protest and students’ growing defiance culminatin­g in the sit-in of 1968, to ambivalenc­e and willing collaborat­ion.

All of these it weaves together into a many-sided whole to produce an elegant, accessible and nuanced study of the operation of UCT as apartheid began to be imposed on South Africa.

Howard Phillips gives readers a pioneering and definitive history of the period. And one which will occupy pride of place on the bookshelve­s of the academics and the thousands of alumni who helped shape this history and the many Capetonian­s touched by Varsity.

As a sample of the overview the author provides of the period, he sums up the transforma­tion of UCT’s relationsh­ip with the state in these years as follows:

“In 1948, this had largely revolved around finance; by 1968, to this pivotal issue had been added the question of the racial identity of its students and teachers, issues which pitted it increasing­ly against the government.

“If in the 1950s it was the university authoritie­s who initiated this opposition in a very proper, formal manner, in the 1960s it was students who, taking full advantage of their university’s location within reach of parliament, set the pace in far more confrontat­ional ways, even to the extent of challengin­g UCT itself. In the next two decades such protests were to gather pace on campus, giving rise to the tag for UCT as ‘Moscow on the Hill’ from critics.

“This was a very far cry from its image in 1953 as ‘a credit to the city … a symbol of an ideal youth which works and plays in a spirit which is infectious’, as Varsity portrayed it.”

Emeritus professor Howard Phillips is a graduate of UCT and London University and taught in the department of historical studies and the department of public health at UCT from 1974 to 2014.

He specialise­s in the history of disease, medicine and health and in the history of higher education. He has written several books in these fields.

 ?? Picture: Supplied ?? DARK DAYS. University of Cape Town anti-apartheid solidarity protest in 1976.
Picture: Supplied DARK DAYS. University of Cape Town anti-apartheid solidarity protest in 1976.

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