https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/24/world/africa/priscilla-jana-dead.html
(photos omitted)

By Alan Cowell Nov. 24, 2020

Representing Nelson and Winnie Mandela among many others, Ms. Jana fought for 
equality in South Africa both in and out of the courtroom.

Priscilla Jana, a forthright human rights lawyer whose client list embraced 
both the fabled elite and the foot soldiers of the struggle against apartheid — 
and who acknowledged crossing a line in her native South Africa between the law 
courts and the clandestine war to end white minority rule — died on Oct. 10 at 
a care home in Pretoria. She was 76.

Ismael Momoniat, a senior government official and family friend, did not 
specify the cause but said her death was not related to the Covid pandemic.

Ms. Jana occupied an ambiguous space in the regimented society imposed by the 
South African government’s policies of racial separation, which became ever 
more pervasive after the whites-only National Party took power in 1948, when 
she was 4 years old.

Ms. Jana was descended from a family of middle-class Indian immigrants, and her 
status was defined by laws that consigned many people of Asian heritage to 
segregated neighborhoods, schools and amenities — apart from the white minority 
and the Black majority alike. In her early years, she said, she felt unsure 
about her identity.

That changed when she was 28 and heard a speech by the activist leader Steve 
Biko ( https://www.sahistory.org.za/people/stephen-bantu-biko ). “I listened to 
his definitions and was amazed,” she wrote in “Fighting for Mandela,” a memoir 
published in 2016. “I realized that you didn’t have to be African to call 
yourself Black.”

“Until now I had been aware of the vacuum in me, not belonging to Black or 
white, just being ‘different,’” she continued. “Now I could be part of a group. 
I had found solidarity, and I felt uplifted.”

“At last,” she wrote, “I knew where I really belonged.”

Ms. Jana spoke of the emotional turmoil inspired by her friendships with Nelson 
Mandela ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/06/world/africa/nelson-mandela_obit.html ) and 
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/02/world/africa/winnie-mandela-dead.html ) as 
the couple were torn apart in the early years of South Africa’s emergence from 
apartheid.

She had gotten to know them as their lawyer when Mr. Mandela was serving his 
27-year imprisonment, much of it on the Robben Island ( 
https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/916/ ) penal settlement off Cape Town.

At the same time, Ms. Madikizela-Mandela became the target of arrest, 
detention, solitary confinement, harassment and ultimately banishment to a 
segregated Black township outside the remote village of Brandfort in what was 
then called the Orange Free State, a profoundly conservative province of South 
Africa.

Such were the racial distinctions there that people classified as Indian, like 
Ms. Jana, were not even permitted to stay overnight.

In her memoir, Ms. Jana said she believed that Ms. Madikizela-Mandela had 
“contributed more than almost any other individual to the anti-apartheid 
struggle that consumed our lives for so many years.”

But when Ms. Madikizela-Mandela returned from Brandfort, she became an 
increasingly radical figure, appealing to young protesters who took to the 
streets to challenge the authorities in the mid-1980s.

She was sentenced to six years in prison for kidnap and assault after the 
brutal murder of a teenage boy, Stompie Moeketsi. While the sentence was later 
reduced, “this shocking incident taints Winnie and the A.N.C,” Ms. Jana wrote, 
referring to the African National Congress, long the dominant political force 
among South Africa’s Black majority. “She had allowed herself and — more 
importantly — the anti-apartheid movement to be dragged in the dirt for all the 
world to see.”

Ms. Jana also took issue with Mr. Mandela’s decision, after his release in 
1990, to stand by his wife in court hearings in the Moeketsi case, before the 
couple formally separated in 1992. (They divorced in 1996.) But Mr. Mandela 
dismissed her concerns. “That was his style,” she wrote. “He was a chieftain.”

She faulted him, too, for signaling his readiness to reconcile with former 
adversaries in the white minority. “I sometimes felt that one could go too far 
with forgiveness,” Ms. Jana wrote.

Her death further depletes the ranks ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/09/world/africa/george-bizos-dead.html ) of a 
cohort of legal veterans whose civil and human rights cases were milestones in 
the effort to bring democracy to South Africa, which it achieved with elections 
in 1994.

“She was fearless and gutsy in supporting the many activists detained and 
harassed by the security police during the apartheid years,” Mr. Momoniat, an 
anti-apartheid campaigner, said in a text message

Unlike some lawyers, who saw their contribution to South Africa’s destiny in 
strictly juridical terms, Ms. Jana regarded her role not simply as an attorney 
but as an activist linked to insurgents seeking the violent overthrow of 
apartheid. On one occasion, she said, she carried a cache of AK-47 assault 
rifles from Soweto on behalf of a client to prevent the guns from falling into 
the hands of the security police.

During business hours she worked on human rights cases, she wrote, but at night 
she joined activists “in an underground cell, plotting to bring down the 
government of the day.”

One of her most celebrated cases involved a 22-year-old insurgent, Solomon 
Mahlangu, who was sentenced to death and hanged despite an international outcry 
after being found guilty of murdering two white people. Mr. Mahlangu had not 
fired the lethal shots; he was convicted under so-called common purpose laws, 
which made perceived complicity in a crime just as punishable as the crime 
itself.

She wrote in her memoir that she was the last of Mr. Mahlangu’s supporters to 
see him alive on the night before his execution in April 1979, and that he had 
asked her to pass on a message to his followers: “Tell my people that I love 
them. Tell them to continue the fight. My blood will nourish the tree that 
bears the fruits of freedom.”

Devikarani Priscilla Sewpal was born on Dec. 5, 1943, in the town of Westville 
on the fringes of the South African port city of Durban, on the Indian Ocean. 
She was the second of three children of Hansrani Sewpal and her husband, 
Hansraj, a high school teacher with a keen sense of the injustices of apartheid.

While studying in Mumbai, India — then known as Bombay — she met and later 
married Reg Jana, a fellow South African student. They divorced in 1989. She 
was later briefly married to a fellow lawyer, Reagan Jacobus; that marriage, 
too, ended in divorce, in the early 1990s.

Ms. Jana is survived by a daughter, Albertina Jana Molefe, and a son, Shivesh 
Sewpal.

While her parents had initially wanted her to become a physician, she switched 
to studying the law in South Africa and graduated in 1974. She then joined a 
firm run by Ismail Ayob, a lawyer of Indian descent whose clients included the 
Mandela family.

n 1977 she traveled to Robben Island to visit with Nelson Mandela, a client. It 
was the first of many trips she would make there on behalf of detainees.

“At one time I represented every political prisoner on Robben Island,” she 
wrote.

After the Mahlangu case, she opened her own practice in late 1979, but within 
weeks she was handed a so-called banning order, subjecting her to overnight 
curfew, permitting her to meet with only one person at a time and restricting 
her movements and her ability to speak in public.

Ms. Jana had been drawn to the Black Consciousness movement, which opposed the 
multiracialism of the A.N.C., and she was part of an effort to prove that two 
white doctors who had been assigned by the police to look after the imprisoned 
Steve Biko had acted improperly. Mr. Biko died in custody in 1977. In 1985, a 
disciplinary panel found that both men, Ivor Lang and Benjamin Tucker, had 
behaved improperly. Dr. Tucker was stripped of his medical qualifications; Dr. 
Lang was reprimanded. ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/1985/10/17/world/pretoria-doctor-loses-his-license.html 
)

In 1990, Nelson Mandela walked free. Four years later, in the country’s first 
fully democratic elections, he was elected president.

Ms. Jana was an A.N.C. lawmaker from 1994 to 1999. She was later a diplomat for 
nine years, serving as the South African ambassador to the Netherlands and 
Ireland before joining the South African Human Rights Commission as its deputy 
chairwoman in 2017.

But she seemed dissatisfied with the way the post-apartheid authorities had run 
the country. “We finally put apartheid, colonialism and slavery behind us after 
350 years, but we are not yet reaping the rewards of that great fight,” she 
wrote in her memoir. “It is going to take much longer.”

After a long career as a foreign correspondent for The New York Times based in 
Africa, the Middle East and Europe, Alan Cowell became a freelance contributor 
in 2015, based in London.


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