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Ethel de Keyser

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Died
  
16 July 2004


Ethel de keyser talks about her work for the anti apartheid movement


Ethel de Keyser (4 November 1926 — 16 July 2004) was a South African anti-apartheid activist based in London, England.

Contents

Early life

Ethel Tarshish was born in 1926, to Jewish parents who moved to South Africa soon after she was born. (Some obituaries located her birth in Vilnius, some in South Africa.) Her father owned a garment factory in South Africa. She went to college in England and became a British citizen. She returned to South Africa in 1960 after the Sharpeville massacre and the detention of her brother Jack Tarshish.

Career

She became involved with her anti-apartheid work. She was on her way back to England in 1963 when Jack had been arrested again as a member of the African National Congress. She was in South Africa for the trial, but she was deported afterwards, and Jack was jailed for twelve years. Back in England, she worked for the London Symphony Orchestra while volunteering for the organization called Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM), eventually as its executive secretary. She led campaigns to maintain the British arms embargo against South Africa, and to refuse recognition to the Ian Smith regime in Rhodesia. She helped organize SATIS (South Africa The Imprisoned Society), a conference and network for those working for the release of political prisoners.

She became director of the British Defense and Aid Fund (BDAF) for Southern Africa in 1981, and set up an educational trust (the Canon Collins Educational Trust for Southern Africa) as well. Antony Sher said she was his "political guru" during this time.

After 1994, her work shifted from an anti-apartheid focus to health and education causes in South Africa, including HIV/AIDS. She was awarded an OBE for her human rights work in 2001.

Personal life

Ethel Tarshish was married to actor David de Keyser for ten years (from 1949 to 1959), and had a longterm relationship with writer George Lamming.

Ethel de Keyser died in 2004, after a heart attack. The trustees of the Canon Collins Educational Trust established scholarships in her name as a memorial.

References

Ethel de Keyser Wikipedia