The Mercury

Education expert Graeme Bloch left SA richer for his leadership

- LISA ISAACS lisa.isaacs@inl.co.za

SOUTH AFRICA is richer as a nation due to Struggle activist and education expert Graeme Bloch’s intellectu­al and organisati­onal leadership in the education sector, ushering the country towards adopting policies that opened the doors to millions of historical­ly excluded citizens.

This was according to President Cyril Ramaphosa in paying tribute to Bloch, who died aged 65 on Friday, following an illness.

Bloch was part of the formation of the End Conscripti­on Campaign.

Later he was a member of the United Democratic Front (UDF), and was detained and arrested several times for his involvemen­t in the democratic movement.

He was banned from 1976 to 1981. A graduate of UCT, where he specialise­d in economic history, Bloch lectured at the University of the Western Cape (UWC) for several years, and was a ministeria­l appointmen­t to the UWC Council between 2003 and 2006.

He was a project manager at the

Joint Education Trust and an executive member of the UDF and National Education Crisis Committee (NECC) in the 1980s.

He was a Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa education policy analyst, a member of the UCT Council, and visiting adjunct professor at the University of Witwatersr­and Public and Developmen­t Management school.

Bloch was married to ANC veteran Cheryl Carolus.

“We recall and honour with gratitude and admiration his contributi­on to our Struggle, from his early days as a passionate, long-haired student activist,” Ramaphosa said.

Bloch’s brother Lance described him as a humble, brave, humorous man in a post on social media.

“A fearless fighter for justice and equality. Banned, detained, beaten by the apartheid government, but he fought on, often at great cost to himself. Stricken by a terrible neuro-degenerati­ve disease which left him with a brilliant mind in a wasting body. “But he accepted it and fought on. “A South African hero,” he said.

 ?? Graeme Bloch ??
Graeme Bloch

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