Cape Argus

Ebrahim’s guidance still sorely needed by the ANC

- KAILENE PILLAY kailene.pillay@inl.co.za

POLITICAL activist Ebrahim Ismail Ebrahim’s death comes at a time when his organisati­on, the ANC, desperatel­y needs his voice of discipline and reason the most.

Speaking at his funeral at Heroes’ Acre in Westpark Cemetery yesterday, Cogta minister and close friend of the political stalwart, Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma said Ebrahim was a comrade with the utmost discipline and poise.

She said his contributi­on to the organisati­on was unmatched and his guidance was desperatel­y needed now, when the ANC was battling internal wars.

Ebrahim died on Monday morning following a two-year battle with lung cancer. He was 84.

Following Muslim tradition, Ebrahim’s body was first taken to the Houghton Masjid, where close family and friends read Islamic prayers as part of his final rites.

Among his close allies, political activist Moe Shaik attended the morning rituals at the Masjid, where he shared some fond memories of his former commander.

Shaik spoke of how Ebrahim joined the liberation movement as a young activist in 1952, and participat­ed in the Congress of the People Campaign, which drew up and adopted the Freedom Charter in 1955.

“He was a wonderfull­y kind soul. I always wondered how he would keep his cool in all he went through,” Shaik said.

Ebrahim was active in all the campaigns of the 1950s and, after the banning of the ANC in 1960, he joined the armed wing of the ANC, Umkhonto We Sizwe, in 1961 and became part of the Natal Regional High Command. He was arrested in 1963 and was Accused Number 1 in the Pietermari­tzburg Sabotage trial, otherwise known as the “Little Rivonia Trial”.

Ebrahim was sentenced to 15 years on Robben Island and served his sentence to the last day. He was released in 1979 and was immediatel­y banned and restricted to his hometown, Durban. In 1980, as per instructio­n of the ANC, he went into exile.

After spending time at the ANC head office in Lusaka, he underwent military training in the ANC camps in Angola. He was then deployed as head of the organisati­on’s Political Military Committee in Swaziland.

In December 1986, Ebrahim was kidnapped from Swaziland by the South African National Intelligen­ce Service on the orders of the apartheid regime’s top brass and detained in John Vorster Square, where he was severely tortured. He was charged for high treason in a highly publicised trial that lasted until 1989, and sentenced to a further 20 years’ imprisonme­nt on Robben Island. He was one of the few political prisoners to serve a second sentence on the Island. In 1991, the appeal court ruled, in a landmark judgment, that his abduction from a foreign country was illegal, and that the South African court had no jurisdicti­on to try him. He was subsequent­ly released from Robben Island in 1991.

Delivering a tribute yesterday, his wife, Shannon, spoke of Ebrahim’s total commitment to liberation.

She said it was “most difficult” to say goodbye to Ebrahim.

Gauteng Premier David Makhura said Ebrahim – affectiona­tely known as ‘Ebie’ – was part of a special generation who shared a common vision and common values, hence the decision to bury him at Heroes Acre alongside Ahmed Kathrada, Yusuf Dadoo and George Bizos.

 ?? TIMOTHY BERNARD African News agency (ANA) ?? A SPECIAL provincial official funeral was held for Ebrahim Ismail Ebrahim. Here his son Kadin Ebrahim stands at the coffin of the late Struggle stalwart. |
TIMOTHY BERNARD African News agency (ANA) A SPECIAL provincial official funeral was held for Ebrahim Ismail Ebrahim. Here his son Kadin Ebrahim stands at the coffin of the late Struggle stalwart. |

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