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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Mamphela Ramphele

We got books, documents through friends who were coming in and out of the country. And because I was a medical doctor at the Livingston Hospital before that arrest [in 1974 for having banned literature] I kept the box with the documents and the books safely because Steve [Biko] could not keep it, because his house could be raided anytime. And unfortunately, I left the hospital being unwell, so I didn´t pack my own luggage. So I would have found a different way of handling them.

So my crime was daring to have books that the apartheid government deemed to be unhealthy for a native´s mind to read. And imagine equating reading a book by let´s say Malcolm X as becoming a communist or being a communist. Or a book by – there were no communist, there wasn´t communist literature in my possession it was just literature about liberation. Liberation was regarded as communist inspired.

[Stephen Bantu Biko (1946 – 1977) was an anti-apartheid activist and the leader of South Africa’s Black Consciousness Movement. He died in 1977, from injuries sustained while in police custody. Malcolm X (1925 – 1965) was an African-American leader and prominent figure in the Nation of Islam who articulated concepts of racial pride and Black Nationalism in the 1950s and ´60s.]