Mapetla Mohapi, We Honour You



Mapetla F. Mohapi was counted the third martyr of BCM leaders. In July, 1976 police detained Mapetla F. Mohapi under the Terrorism Act. Mohapi’s arrest occurred concurrent to the trial of nine South African Student Organization (SASO) and BPC leaders in what one newspaper called the ‘Trial of Black Consciousness’ (SAIRR, 1976: 131).

On 5 August 1976, Mohapi was found dead in his cell, hanging by a pair of jeans; police found a note in his cell, addressed to Captain Schoeman of the security police: ‘This is just to say goodbye to you. You can carry on interrogating my dead body. Perhaps you will get what you want from it. Your friend, Mapetla.’ However, a number of factors cast doubt onto the official story that Mohapi committed suicide. A handwriting expert deemed the note a ‘clumsy imitation’ of Mapetla’s hand and the letters he smuggled to his wife written in the days before his death did not, she claimed, carry ‘any desperation or frustration;’ in a later, unrelated, incident a member of the same security police-force, while torturing a South African journalist, placed a wet towel around her neck and stated: ‘Now you know how Mapetla died.’ (Herbstein, 1979: 172; Harrison, 1981: 222-4).

Mapetla Mohapi was born in the rural village of Jozanashoek, Sterkspruit in the former Transkei (now Eastern Province) on 2 September 1947. He studied at the University of the North (Turfloop), where he graduated with a degree in Social Work in the early 1970s.

While studying at Turfloop, he was drawn to the philosophy of Black Consciousness, and became active in the South African Students Organisation (SASO). After students at several Black universities held pro-Frelimo rallies in October 1974 to celebrate the independence of Mozambique, Mohapi, together with several other leaders of SASO and the Black People's Convention, was detained. He was released in April 1975 without charge.

In 1973 he married Nohle. Then in 1974, whilst Nohle was expecting their daughter, Mohapi was detained for eight months.

Three months after he was elected the permanent Secretary of SASO and while serving as an administrator of a trust that took care of ex-political prisoners and their families, he was banned under the Suppression of Communism Act and confined to the areas of King William's Town and Zwelitsha. A month after the start of the 1976 Soweto uprising, in a swoop of Black Consciousness activists, Mapetla was again detained without charge on 16 July. Twenty days later, on 5 August 1976, Mohapi died in police custody.

Upon his death, police produced a "suicide note", claiming he had committed suicide in his cell. An inquest held later did not make a finding on the suicide claim - the note was confirmed by a leading British handwriting expert as a forgery but found that no one could be held responsible for Mohapi's death.

In her keynote address, at the unveiling of the Mapetla Mohapi memorial, at Jozanashoek, Sterkspruit, on 20 April 2002, former Housing Minister, Sankie Mthembi-Mahanyele, said that then Deputy Minister of Arts, Culture, Science and Technology, Bridget Mabandla told her that she and her husband, Lindelwa, were recruited into the ANC by Mohapi. He helped people leave the country to join the African National Congress (ANC).

On 16 June 2004, the South African Government conferred The Order of Luthuli in Silver to Mapetla Mohapi for dedicating his life to the struggle for a democratic, free and non-racial South Africa.

References

Anon, Mapetla Mohapi (1947– 1976), from The Presidency, [online], Available at www.thepresidency.gov.za. [Accessed on 7 July 2011]
Mthembi-Mahanyele, S (2002), Keynote address by Housing Minister, Sankie Mthembi-Mahanyele, at the unveiling of Mapetla Mohapi memorial, Jozana, 20 April 2002, [online]Available at www.info.gov.za. [Accessed on 7 July 2011]
Anon (1996), Truth And Reconciliation Commission [online] Availableat www.justice.gov.za [Accessed on 8 July 2011]


Bio retrieved from the South African History Online at http://www.sahistory.org.za/people/mapetla-mohapi

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