Cape Argus

Dangor linked leaders to make a difference

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UNAIDS is deeply saddened by the death of our dear friend and former colleague Achmat Dangor.

Mr Dangor was an acclaimed author and leading activist who dedicated his life to social justice and the Struggle for liberation and democracy in South Africa.

He was a prominent voice in the response to Aids at a time when denial was widespread, speaking out and writing about the spread of HIV and the impact that the Aids epidemic was having in South Africa.

He expanded his work on HIV when he joined the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund as chief executive and when he became the interim director of the World Aids campaign.

In 2004, he joined UNaids as the director of advocacy, communicat­ion and leadership, designing campaigns and strategies to put HIV at the very top of political agendas.

“Achmat Dangor was an activist who brought together leaders from all walks of life to make a difference for people – for women, children, the marginalis­ed and people living with HIV,” said Mahesh Mahalingam, director of communicat­ions and global advocacy at UNaids.

“He combined human rights, compassion and kindness to make a unique impression on the Aids response.” Mr Dangor promoted social justice throughout his life.

In the 1970s, he started a writers’ group called Black Thoughts, a collective establishe­d to promote African writers and black culture and to correct the cultural distortion­s being imposed by apartheid.

In the 1980s, he co-founded the Congress of South African Writers, a grass roots organisati­on establishe­d to promote literature and redress the imbalances of apartheid education.

Mr Dangor served as the chief executive of the Nelson Mandela Foundation, where he helped to establish Nelson Mandela Day, July 18, to honour the legacy of Mandela through community service.

He was also the founding executive director of the Kagiso Trust, the largest black-led foundation in South Africa, and the South African representa­tive of the Ford Foundation, a non-profit organisati­on providing grants and investment­s to reduce poverty and injustice. Mr Dangor taught creative writing and South African literature at New York State University and published a number of critically acclaimed works of fiction and poetry, including Bitter Fruit, which was shortliste­d for the Man Booker Prize, and Kafka’s Curse, for which he received the Herman Charles Bosman Prize. UNaids expresses its heartfelt condolence­s to the family and friends of Mr Dangor. |

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